Most businesses pay between $1,500 and $5,000 per month for SEO services. The wide range exists because SEO isn’t a single product — it’s a combination of technical optimization, content creation, link building, local visibility, and (increasingly) AI search optimization. What you need depends on your industry, competition level, number of locations, and starting position. This guide breaks down every pricing model, what each budget level gets you, and where the industry is headed in 2026.
How much does SEO cost per month?
The US market ranges from $500 to $25,000+ per month. Here’s what each tier actually looks like in practice — not just what agencies promise, but what you should expect to receive:
| Monthly Budget | What You Get | Who It’s For | Expected Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under $500 | Automated reports, basic GBP tweaks, template content | Nobody (you get what you pay for) | Minimal — often net negative if spam tactics used |
| $500-1,000 | DIY tools subscription + consulting hours | Solopreneurs who can do the work themselves | Marginal improvement if owner executes consistently |
| $1,500-3,000 | Technical audit, GBP optimization, 5-10 service pages, basic content, monthly reporting | Single-location local businesses in low-medium competition | Rankings in 3-6 months, 20-50% traffic growth in year 1 |
| $3,000-5,000 | Everything above + content marketing, link building, review management, AI search optimization | Single-location in competitive markets, small multi-location | Significant ranking gains, 50-100%+ traffic growth |
| $5,000-10,000 | Full-service: technical, content, PR, multi-location, advanced analytics, AI search + traditional | Multi-location businesses, competitive verticals (legal, dental, med spa) | Market leadership in 6-12 months, compounding organic pipeline |
| $10,000-25,000+ | Enterprise: national campaigns, large multi-location, dedicated team, custom strategy | Franchises, e-commerce, enterprise B2B | Full organic market capture |
The critical threshold: $1,500/month is where SEO starts being real. Below that, agencies cut corners — automated link building, AI-generated content without editing, templated reports. The $1,500-3,000 range is where most local businesses find the best value-to-cost ratio.
What pricing models do SEO agencies use?
There are four common pricing structures. Each has tradeoffs:
Monthly Retainer (Most Common)
Fixed monthly fee for ongoing services. This is the standard for a reason: SEO is continuous work, not a one-time fix. Agencies manage your technical health, create content, build links, and optimize your Google Business Profile on an ongoing basis.
- Typical range: $1,500-10,000/month
- Best for: Businesses committed to long-term organic growth
- Watch for: Agencies that lock you into 12-month contracts with no performance milestones
Project-Based (One-Time)
Fixed price for a specific deliverable: technical audit, site migration, content overhaul, or competitive analysis.
- Typical range: $1,000-15,000 per project
- Best for: Businesses that need a specific fix but can handle ongoing work in-house
- Watch for: Scope creep and “we found more issues” upsells after the initial project
Hourly Consulting
Pay for expertise by the hour. Good for businesses with internal marketing teams that need strategic guidance.
- Typical range: $100-300/hour
- Best for: Companies with in-house teams who need a specialist to audit, advise, or train
- Watch for: Hours adding up without clear deliverables
Performance-Based
Agency compensation tied to ranking improvements or traffic/lead increases.
- Typical range: Base fee + bonus for hitting targets
- Best for: Sounds great in theory, but few reputable agencies offer pure performance-based pricing
- Watch for: Agencies gaming metrics (ranking for low-value keywords, inflating traffic numbers) to trigger bonuses. If an agency offers pure performance pricing with no base fee, question how they fund the work.
What factors determine how much SEO costs?
Seven factors drive the price:
1. Competition level
A plumber in a town of 50,000 faces different competition than a personal injury lawyer in Miami. Competitive analysis determines how much content, how many links, and how much ongoing effort you need to rank. More competitive = more expensive.
2. Number of locations
Multi-location businesses multiply the work: each location needs its own GBP, its own city pages, its own citation management, its own review strategy. Expect $500-2,000 per additional location on top of the base.
3. Starting position
A brand-new website with no domain authority needs more work than a 10-year-old site with existing rankings and backlinks. The technical debt of an older site (broken links, duplicate content, slow pages) also adds cost.
4. Content needs
A dental practice needs 10-15 procedure pages, city pages, blog posts, and FAQ content. A solo consultant might need 5 pages total. More content = more cost. Quality content with original research costs more than rewritten generic articles.
5. Vertical-specific requirements
YMYL (Your Money, Your Life) verticals — healthcare, legal, financial — require compliance review, credentialing verification, and careful claim language. This adds cost but is non-negotiable.
6. AI search optimization
In 2026, businesses increasingly need optimization for AI platforms (ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Perplexity) alongside traditional Google. Agencies offering AI search optimization (entity building, structured data for AI, AI Share of Voice tracking) charge more — but this is where visibility is shifting.
7. Reporting and communication depth
Basic monthly PDF vs. real-time dashboards with weekly calls. More transparency and more face time costs more but dramatically improves the relationship and results.
How much does SEO cost by industry?
Pricing varies significantly by vertical due to competition and compliance requirements:
| Industry | Typical Monthly Range | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Dental practices | $1,500-5,000 | Procedure-specific content, HIPAA compliance, competitive local markets |
| Law firms | $3,000-10,000+ | Extremely high CPCs (organic saves $150+ per click), bar compliance, competitive |
| Med spas | $2,000-6,000 | FDA/FTC compliance, treatment-specific pages, visual content needs |
| Auto services | $1,000-3,000 | Lower competition, fewer compliance requirements, strong local pack opportunity |
| Home services | $1,000-3,000 | Seasonal demand, licensing display requirements, high-intent searches |
| Restaurants | $500-1,500 | Simple GBP optimization, review management, limited content needs |
| E-commerce | $3,000-15,000 | Product page optimization, category architecture, technical complexity |
| B2B / SaaS | $5,000-20,000 | Long sales cycles, thought leadership content, complex keyword strategies |
| Financial services | $5,000-15,000 | SEC/FINRA compliance, competitive keywords, trust-building content |
What should you NOT pay for in SEO?
Avoid agencies selling these as standalone services or including them as “value adds”:
- Directory submission packages ($200-500) — Submitting to 500 directories is a 2010 tactic. Most of those directories are spam. Strategic citation building (Tier 0-2 directories) is valuable; mass submission is not.
- “SEO-optimized press releases” ($300-800 each) — Press release distribution for link building doesn’t work. Google ignores links from PR distribution sites.
- Guaranteed #1 rankings — No price makes this legitimate. If someone charges for guaranteed rankings, they’re either lying or planning to rank you for terms nobody searches.
- Social media management bundled as “SEO” — Social media does not directly affect rankings. It’s a valid marketing channel, but it’s not SEO.
- Monthly “optimization” with no content — If your SEO package doesn’t include new content creation (pages, blog posts, or at minimum content updates), what exactly are they optimizing each month?
How does AI search change SEO pricing in 2026?
AI search optimization is a new line item that didn’t exist two years ago. Here’s what it adds:
- AISO Score assessment — Evaluating your AI search readiness across 6 dimensions (crawlability, structure, authority, citability, freshness, measurability). Usually included in initial audits or as a standalone assessment.
- Entity building — Structured data, Knowledge Graph signals, sameAs links, author attribution. Adds $500-1,500/month depending on scope.
- Content restructuring for AI citation — Reformatting existing content into capsule format (40-60 word direct answers) that AI platforms can extract and attribute. One-time project: $2,000-5,000.
- AI Share of Voice monitoring — Tracking how often your brand is cited vs. competitors across AI platforms. New service, typically $500-1,000/month.
Agencies that don’t offer any AI search optimization are pricing themselves out of relevance. By 2027, this won’t be a separate line item — it’ll be table stakes.
Read: How to Choose an SEO Agency → Get Your Free AISO Score →