When immigration firm managing partners ask about SEO pricing, the honest answer is: it depends — but not on arbitrary factors. Three variables consistently move the number.
1. Market Competition
An immigration attorney in a mid-size Midwest market competes against a different set of firms than one in Los Angeles, Houston, or New York. Competitive markets require more content production, more link acquisition, and more sustained effort to move rankings. That work costs more. A realistic starting budget in a major metro is $3,000–$6,000/month; in less saturated markets, $1,500–$2,500/month can move the needle.
2. Scope of Services Targeted
Immigration law covers a wide range of practice areas: family petitions, employment visas, asylum, removal defense, naturalization, DACA, and more. Each practice area requires dedicated content and page optimization. Firms targeting five service lines need meaningfully more work than those focused on two. Scope creep — adding more keyword targets mid-engagement — is a common reason costs increase unexpectedly.
3. Multilingual and Multicultural Requirements
Many immigration firms serve Spanish-speaking, Mandarin-speaking, or other non-English communities. Multilingual SEO — properly translated and culturally adapted content, hreflang implementation, and separate keyword research by language — adds both time and cost. It also tends to produce strong ROI because competition in non-English search is often lower than in English.
Secondary cost factors include the current state of your website (a technically broken site requires remediation before SEO can compound), whether local SEO and Google Business Profile work is included, and whether the agency handles content writing or expects your team to produce it.