Large language models (LLMs) still produce plausible-sounding but ungrounded factual claims, a problem that worsens in multi-turn dialogue as context grows and early errors cascade. We introduce HalluHard, a challenging multi-turn hallucination benchmark with 950 seed questions spanning four high-stakes domains: legal cases, research questions, medical guidelines, and coding. We operationalize groundedness by requiring inline citations for factual assertions. To support reliable evaluation in open-ended settings, we propose a judging pipeline that iteratively retrieves evidence via web search. It can fetch, filter, and parse full-text sources (including PDFs) to assess whether cited material actually supports the generated content. Across a diverse set of frontier proprietary and open-weight models, hallucinations remain substantial even with web search (approx 30% for the strongest configuration, Opus-4.5 with web search), with content-grounding errors persisting at high rates. Finally, we show that hallucination behavior is shaped by model capacity, turn position, effective reasoning, and the type of knowledge required.
HalluHard: A Hard Multi-Turn Hallucination Benchmark
Large language models continue to generate plausible but ungrounded factual claims in multi-turn dialogue, with hallucinations remaining significant even when utilizing web search for verification across high-stakes domains.
- Year
- 2026
- Venue
- arXiv 2026
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- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2602.01031ARXIV-DEFAULT
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