CTR definitely matters, but probably not as a simple direct ranking factor in the way many people imagine.
Google pays attention to user behavior signals:
- clicks,
- pogo-sticking,
- dwell time,
- engagement,
- whether users return to search results quickly.
If a page consistently gets a higher CTR than expected for its position and users stay on the page, it can indicate that the result satisfies search intent well.
But clicks alone usually won’t save weak content long term.
I’ve seen pages with average CTR rank very well because:
- content quality was strong,
- backlinks were solid,
- topical authority was high,
- intent match was excellent.
At the same time, improving titles and meta descriptions can absolutely increase traffic significantly even without ranking changes.
So CTR is important, but mostly as part of the bigger user satisfaction picture.