SEO pricing isn't arbitrary, but it can feel that way when you're getting quotes. The variation you'll see — from $400/month to $8,000/month — reflects real differences in scope, not just agency markup.
For tour operators specifically, these are the factors that move the number:
- Number of destinations and tour types. Each destination needs its own optimized page. A single-destination operator with five tour products has a very different content surface area than a company running 40 tours across 12 countries. More pages to create, optimize, and build authority for means more work and higher cost.
- Market competition. Ranking for "Paris food tours" is harder than ranking for "volcanic hiking tours in Iceland." Competitive keywords require more content depth, stronger backlink profiles, and longer timelines. Agencies price for the difficulty of the work, not just the volume.
- Starting point. A site with no prior SEO investment needs foundational technical work before content and links can compound. That upfront remediation adds cost in the first few months.
- Content creation. If your retainer includes writing destination guides, tour landing pages, and travel blog content, expect to pay more. If you're providing the content yourself or already have a writer, the retainer can focus on strategy and technical execution.
- Reporting and strategy cadence. Monthly calls, competitive tracking, and custom dashboards add overhead. Some operators want that visibility; others prefer a leaner engagement. Both are valid — they just cost differently.
Understanding these drivers helps you evaluate quotes honestly. A $1,200/month retainer that excludes content creation isn't comparable to a $3,000/month retainer that includes six destination pages per month. Always ask what's in scope.