SEO pricing isn't arbitrary — it reflects how much work is genuinely required to move a business from where it is to where it wants to be in search results. For wedding planners, three variables account for most of the cost difference between a $600/month engagement and a $3,000/month one.
1. Market Competition
A planner in a mid-size city with a few established competitors has a meaningfully different starting point than one targeting Manhattan or Los Angeles. High-competition markets require more link acquisition, deeper content output, and longer sustained effort — all of which increases cost. In our experience, metro markets often require 6–12 months of consistent work before organic rankings stabilize at a competitive level.
2. Scope of Work
Not all SEO engagements look the same. A local SEO package focused on Google Business Profile, citation building, and review velocity is structurally less expensive than a full-funnel campaign that also includes content creation, technical audits, backlink outreach, and schema implementation. Define what you actually need before comparing prices across providers.
3. Starting Authority
A wedding planner website with existing domain authority, good technical structure, and some existing content requires less remediation than a site launched 18 months ago with thin pages and no backlinks. Providers assess your starting point before quoting — and those quotes will reflect how far you need to travel. Expect higher early-stage costs if your site needs significant foundational work.
Understanding these three factors lets you evaluate proposals on substance rather than sticker price. A $1,500/month retainer in a competitive market may be genuinely lean; the same budget in a smaller city may be generous.