SEO pricing is not arbitrary. Every quote you receive reflects someone's estimate of the labor, tools, and time required to move your firm up in a specific market against specific competitors. Understanding what drives cost helps you evaluate whether a proposal is scoped correctly — not just whether it fits your budget.
Market Competition
Criminal defense is one of the most competitive legal verticals in search. In large metros — Los Angeles, Miami, Houston, Chicago — you are competing against firms that have invested in SEO for years and hold strong domain authority. Catching up requires more content, more link acquisition, and more time. That scope is reflected in cost.
Smaller metros and mid-size cities have fewer entrenched competitors. In those markets, a well-executed local SEO program can move rankings meaningfully in 3–6 months with a more modest monthly investment.
Scope of Services
Not all SEO retainers cover the same work. A local-only package focused on Google Business Profile optimization, citation cleanup, and review strategy costs less than a full-funnel program that includes technical audits, practice-area content, link building, and authority development. Both are legitimate — they serve different firm situations.
Firm Size and Geographic Footprint
A solo practitioner serving one county needs different SEO than a multi-attorney firm with offices in four cities. Multi-location SEO requires separate GBP profiles, location-specific landing pages, and jurisdiction-targeted content — all of which add scope and cost. Single-location firms can often start smaller and scale up.
Starting Authority
If your website is technically broken, has thin or duplicate content, and has never earned a meaningful backlink, the early months of engagement involve remediation before growth. Firms starting from a stronger baseline often see faster initial movement, which affects how budget gets allocated in months one through four.