When divorce attorneys ask what SEO costs, they're really asking three separate questions: how competitive is my market, how much work does my site need, and what level of ongoing investment keeps me visible? Each answer pulls the price in a different direction.
Market Competition
A family law firm in a mid-size city of 200,000 people competes against a smaller pool of established practices than a firm in Chicago, Houston, or Los Angeles. In our experience, metro markets with dense family law competition require more aggressive content production, higher-authority backlinks, and more intensive Google Business Profile management — all of which add to monthly cost. Market competition is the most honest predictor of where your retainer lands in the pricing range.
Site Starting Point
If your existing website has thin content, no local schema markup, poor Core Web Vitals scores, or a weak backlink profile, meaningful foundational work comes before growth-oriented work. That early-stage investment either shows up as a higher retainer in month one or as a separate onboarding fee. Either structure is reasonable — just make sure you understand which one you're agreeing to.
Service Scope
A full-service engagement covering technical SEO, local SEO, content strategy, and link building costs more than a local-only retainer covering just your Google Business Profile and citation management. Neither is wrong — the right scope depends on where your firm has the most opportunity. A firm already ranking in the Map Pack but losing on informational queries needs a different mix than one that doesn't appear in local results at all.
Content Volume
Divorce law SEO relies heavily on content — practice area pages, FAQ content, jurisdiction-specific guides, and blog articles that answer the questions prospective clients type at 11pm. The number of content assets produced per month is one of the clearest levers on monthly cost. More content output generally means faster results and higher monthly spend.