SEO pricing isn't arbitrary — it reflects how much work is required to move your school up in local search results. For preschools, several factors push costs up or down.
Market Competition
If you operate in a dense metro area where five other preschools, two Montessori programs, and a national chain are all targeting the same zip codes, ranking requires more sustained effort. Rural and suburban markets with fewer local competitors are generally less expensive to dominate. Before budgeting, search "preschool near [your city]" and count how many paid and organic results appear. That's a rough proxy for difficulty.
Number of Locations
Each location requires its own Google Business Profile, citation profile, and local content signals. A single-location preschool and a three-campus program are fundamentally different scopes of work. Multi-location programs should expect costs to scale — though not always linearly, since some technical and content work overlaps.
Starting Authority
A preschool with a three-year-old website that has earned a few local backlinks and has a complete Google Business Profile is much easier to move than one starting from scratch with a template site, no reviews, and inconsistent NAP (name, address, phone) data across directories. Your starting point matters as much as your goal.
Scope of Services
A full-service monthly retainer typically covers ongoing content, link building, technical maintenance, Google Business Profile management, and reporting. A narrower engagement might focus only on local SEO signals. Both are legitimate — the right choice depends on where your enrollment bottleneck actually is.
In our experience working with local service businesses like preschools, the biggest pricing mistakes happen when directors compare total price without comparing scope. A $600/month retainer that includes active link outreach and monthly content is often a better value than a $400/month package that only covers a few keyword tweaks and a monthly report.