When someone decides to look for a therapist, the search almost always starts with geography. Queries like 'therapist near me,' 'psychologist in [city],' and 'anxiety counseling [neighborhood]' dominate the search landscape for mental health services. These are not brand searches — patients aren't looking for you specifically. They're looking for a qualified provider they can reach.
This matters for how you think about online visibility. You don't need a massive content strategy or a high domain authority website to rank for these searches. What you need is a well-maintained local presence: an accurate Google Business Profile, consistent directory listings, and a steady stream of patient reviews. These are the inputs Google weighs most heavily for map pack placement.
The map pack — the block of three business listings that appears at the top of local search results, often before any organic results — is where the majority of patient clicks go. Appearing there is the primary goal of local SEO for a psychology practice.
Google determines map pack rankings using three broad factors: relevance (does your profile match what the patient searched for?), distance (how close is your practice to the searcher?), and prominence (how well-known and trusted does Google consider your practice to be, based on citations, reviews, and links?). You can't control distance, but you have significant influence over relevance and prominence.
The good news: most psychology practices in most markets have not optimized these factors thoroughly. In our experience working with healthcare practices, even modest improvements to GBP completeness and citation consistency move practices into map pack visibility within a few months.
Note: This page covers general local SEO practices. It is not legal or compliance advice. For HIPAA and APA advertising guidelines specific to your practice and state, consult your licensing authority.