SEO pricing for auto dealerships is not one-size-fits-all. The variables that move the number up or down are specific and predictable once you know what to look for.
Market Competition
A Toyota store in a mid-size metro competing against four other Toyota dealers within 20 miles requires significantly more effort than the same store in a rural market with minimal direct competition. Google's local algorithm rewards relevance, proximity, and authority — and authority takes time and resources to build. More competitors means more investment to overtake them.
Inventory Volume and Site Complexity
Dealership websites are technically complex. VDP (Vehicle Detail Page) structures, real-time inventory feeds, schema markup for vehicle listings, and platform constraints from providers like Dealer.com, CDK Global, or DealerSocket all affect how much technical SEO work is required. A store with 300 used vehicles and three new car lines has a meaningfully different technical footprint than a single-brand store with 80 units.
Scope of Services
Dealership SEO typically bundles several workstreams:
- Technical SEO: Site speed, crawl health, schema, mobile performance
- Local SEO: Google Business Profile management, directory consistency across Cars.com, AutoTrader, CarGurus, and DealerRater
- Content: Model pages, trim-level pages, service department content, local landing pages
- Link acquisition: Building domain authority through earned mentions and citations
Agencies that quote a low number often mean a narrow scope. Before comparing prices, confirm what each proposal actually includes.
Single Rooftop vs. Multi-Rooftop Groups
Dealer groups with five or more stores have different needs. Some infrastructure can be shared (technical setup, reporting), but local SEO for each location requires separate Google Business Profile management, distinct citation profiles, and location-specific content. Pricing scales — but not linearly.