Most CRE firms asking about SEO cost get a range and not much else. That range is real — but the reason for the spread matters more than the number itself.
Three variables account for most of the pricing difference between proposals:
- Geographic scope: A single-market firm in Indianapolis competing for industrial tenant rep searches faces a fundamentally different challenge than a regional firm targeting occupiers across five metros. More markets means more content, more local authority signals, and more ongoing optimization work.
- Current authority baseline: A firm with a five-year-old website, some existing content, and moderate domain authority will reach ranking positions faster than one starting with a new domain and no backlink profile. Providers price for the gap that needs closing.
- Service mix required: Technical SEO, content production, Google Business Profile management, link building, and local citation work each add cost. A firm that only needs content and technical fixes costs less to serve than one needing the full stack.
A fourth factor is competition density. Winning for "commercial real estate broker Dallas" requires more sustained effort than ranking for "industrial warehouse leasing Boise." Most providers factor local search competition into their pricing, though not all make this explicit in their proposals.
Understanding these drivers lets you evaluate a proposal intelligently — not just compare monthly retainer numbers side by side. A $2,000/month proposal that excludes link building and covers only one service line will underperform a $3,500/month proposal with full-stack execution in the same market.