Get structured article data from Google News for any keyword, region, or language.
Enter keywords to search for (one per line). You can search for multiple topics simultaneously.
Select your preferred region for news results
Select the language for news results
Filter news by publication date
Maximum number of articles to fetch per search query (10-200). Each keyword gets this many results
Results to deliver
1,600 creditsThis agent actively searches live listings — results may vary. You are only charged for what is delivered, up to this number.
Lagic Proxy
Pricing
Scrape Google News for articles based on your keywords, language, and region. Extract article titles, publication dates, source websites, and the full article text for media monitoring or market research.
Manually tracking news mentions, competitor activity, or industry trends is a time-consuming process. This tool automates the collection of news data from Google News, turning a manual research task into a streamlined data feed. Simply provide a list of search keywords, and the tool will search Google News within your specified region, language, and time frame (e.g., last 24 hours, last week). It doesn't just return headlines and links; it goes a step further by extracting the full content of each article, providing a complete dataset for analysis. This is designed for public relations agencies, brand managers, financial analysts, and researchers who need to stay informed without dedicating hours to manual searches. Use the extracted data to build media monitoring dashboards, perform sentiment analysis, track brand health, or compile research for clients and stakeholders.
Enter the keywords or topics you want to track, with each one on a new line.
Select the geographical region for your news search from the dropdown list.
Choose the language of the news articles you want to find.
Set the time period to filter results, such as 'Last 24 hours' or 'Last week'.
Define the maximum number of articles you want to get for each keyword.
Run the tool and download your structured news data as a CSV or JSON file.