Most SEO advice is written for e-commerce stores or national brands. Painting is different. Your customers are searching from a specific zip code, hiring someone who can show up tomorrow, and making a decision based on reviews and proximity as much as price. That context shapes everything.
Google's local algorithm weighs three primary factors for map pack rankings: relevance (does your profile match what the searcher needs), proximity (how close are you to the searcher), and prominence (how well-established and trusted does Google consider your business). Painters can directly influence all three.
Relevance improves through your Google Business Profile categories, your website's on-page signals, and the service descriptions you write. Proximity is largely fixed by your registered business address, though service area settings help extend your reach. Prominence is built over time through reviews, citations, and links from locally relevant websites.
One thing painters often miss: residential and commercial painting are treated as different search intents by Google. A homeowner searching "interior painters near me" and a property manager searching "commercial painting contractors in [city]" are not the same query. Your local SEO strategy should address both audiences with separate content, not one generic page trying to cover everything.
The good news is that most painting markets are not saturated with sophisticated SEO. In our experience working with local service businesses, painting contractors who execute the fundamentals consistently — a complete GBP, accurate citations, and service area pages — move into the top three map results faster than they expect.