Most hospital SEO audits fail because they treat the website as a single entity. A health system is not a single entity — it is a collection of service lines, locations, physician profiles, and patient pathways, each with its own organic visibility requirements.
An effective audit separates those requirements into hospital SEO audit has [four distinct layers](/resources/accountants/seo-audit-for-accounting-firms) — technical, content and scores each one independently before drawing any conclusions about priority or investment.
- Technical Health: Crawlability, indexation, page speed, Core Web Vitals, structured data implementation, and HTTPS integrity across all subdomains and facility microsites.
- Service-Line Content: Whether each clinical program — cardiology, oncology, orthopedics, primary care, behavioral health — has sufficient page depth, condition-level coverage, and appropriate E-E-A-T signals to compete for the queries patients actually use.
- Local Pack Performance: Google Business Profile completeness, review volume and recency, NAP consistency, and map pack rank for each physical facility location.
- Analytics Configuration: Whether the measurement stack is capturing organic traffic accurately without violating HIPAA — including correct exclusion of PHI from tracking pixels, server-side event configuration, and GA4 data retention settings.
Each layer gets a score before you look at the others. A health system with strong technical infrastructure and weak service-line content needs a different response than one with excellent content buried under crawl errors. Conflating the four layers produces a priority list that fixes the wrong things first.
Note: This framework is educational guidance for hospital marketing teams. For decisions affecting patient data handling or regulatory compliance, consult your HIPAA compliance officer and legal counsel.