Fixing wrong information about your tire shop on ChatGPT, Gemini, or Google AI Overviews starts with correcting the same source listings and web pages these tools pull from, then giving the correction time to be re-crawled and re-summarized. There is no direct "edit" button inside ChatGPT itself. Instead, you fix your Google Business Profile, website, and directory listings, and the AI-generated answers catch up as they refresh their information.
How to correct bad AI information about your shop
When an AI assistant states the wrong hours, address, or service list for your tire shop, the fastest path to a fix is updating the underlying sources: your Google Business Profile, your website's contact and services pages, and major directories like Yelp or Bing Places. These tools generate answers from a mix of web content, business listings, and review platforms rather than from a single verified database. Correct the source, and the answer follows once the engine revisits that source.
Why AI engines keep repeating outdated details
AI search tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity don't call your shop to ask what's true today. They summarize whatever text they've indexed from your website, your Google Business Profile, review sites, and local directories, and that indexed version can be weeks or months old depending on when the engine last crawled it. If your hours changed for the season or you added a new service like TPMS (tire pressure monitoring system) sensor replacement, but the old version is still live somewhere on the web, an AI engine may quote the outdated version confidently, with no indication to the customer that it might be wrong. The tools are built to sound certain, not to flag uncertainty, which is exactly why a stale listing becomes a repeated, confidently wrong answer instead of a one-time glitch.
Another reason wrong details persist is that these engines often blend information from multiple sources into one answer. If your Google Business Profile lists correct Saturday hours but a directory site still shows you closed on weekends, the AI summary might split the difference or default to whichever source it weighted as more authoritative. That's why a single correction on your website is not always enough. The fix has to be consistent everywhere the engine looks.
Fixing the source data engines actually read
The only lasting way to correct what ChatGPT or Gemini says about your tire shop is to update every public listing where the wrong information might live, not just your own website. That means checking your Google Business Profile, Apple Maps listing, Yelp page, Bing Places profile, and any local directory or chamber of commerce site that lists your hours or services, and making sure they all say the same thing.
Start with your Google Business Profile, since it's the most heavily weighted source for local business questions and the one most AI Overviews and voice assistants lean on. Update your hours, holiday closures, service list, and phone number there first. Then move through your website itself, checking that the footer, contact page, and any schema markup (structured data embedded in your site's code that tells search engines specific facts like hours or services in a machine-readable format) all match. If your site still has old JSON-LD or microdata schema listing hours from a previous season, that mismatch alone can confuse an AI engine even after you've updated the visible text on the page.
Once your own properties are consistent, work through third-party directories. Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps, and any regional or industry-specific directory (tire manufacturer locator pages count here too, if you're a dealer for a specific brand) should all reflect the same hours and services. Inconsistent listings across these platforms are one of the most common reasons AI tools give conflicting or outdated answers, because the engine has no way to know which version is current when it finds three different sets of hours across three different sites.
Where wrong hours usually come from in the first place
Wrong hours displayed by an AI assistant almost always trace back to a listing that was updated in one place but not everywhere, most commonly a Google Business Profile that was changed for a holiday or seasonal schedule and never changed back, or a directory listing that was set up once and never revisited. Old promotional pages, outdated PDFs linked from your own site, and duplicate Google Business Profiles from a past move or ownership change are also frequent culprits.
Duplicate listings deserve special attention because they're easy to forget about. If your tire shop moved locations, changed its name, or was previously listed under a different owner, there may be an old, unclaimed Google Business Profile still floating around with the previous address and hours. AI engines don't automatically know that listing is defunct. They may treat it as a valid source and blend its details into an answer alongside your current, correct listing, which is how a customer ends up being told your shop is at an address you left years ago.
Seasonal hour changes are another recurring source of errors. A shop that shortens its hours in winter or extends them during peak tire-changeover season in spring and fall needs to update that change across every platform, then revert it just as consistently. Skipping the revert step on even one directory is enough to leave a wrong detail sitting there for an AI tool to find later.
How long it takes for corrections to actually appear
Corrections to your Google Business Profile, website, and directory listings don't appear instantly in AI-generated answers, because tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and AI Overviews rely on their own crawling and indexing schedules rather than pulling live data in real time. Some answers may update within days if the engine has recently revisited your listing; others may lag longer if your site or profile isn't crawled often.
The most reliable way to speed this up is consistency, not urgency. An engine that finds the same corrected hours and services across your Google Business Profile, website, and every directory is more likely to trust and surface that version the next time it summarizes information about your shop, compared to a business with mismatched details still scattered across older listings. There's no dashboard that shows exactly when ChatGPT or Perplexity will reflect your update, so the practical approach is to make the correction everywhere at once, confirm it's live on each platform, and check back periodically by asking the tools directly what they say about your hours and services.
What it sounds like when the answer names someone else
A driver with a slow leak pulls over, opens an AI assistant, and asks which tire shop nearby is open right now and handles run-flat repairs. The assistant answers instantly, naming a competitor three miles farther away, describing their hours and services with complete confidence, while your shop, actually closer and actually open, doesn't come up at all. The driver never sees your name, never knows there was a choice to make, and simply drives to the shop the AI assistant mentioned. That's the moment wrong or missing information stops being a minor inconvenience and starts costing real customers, one search at a time.