Most service businesses measure SEO ROI in terms of average transaction value — a few hundred or a few thousand dollars per client. Personal injury is structurally different, and that difference matters when you're modeling whether SEO investment makes sense.
At a standard 33% contingency fee, a $300,000 settlement generates $99,000 in attorney fees. A $75,000 settlement still produces $24,750. These aren't edge cases — they're routine outcomes for auto accident, slip-and-fall, and premises liability cases in most major markets.
This means the ROI calculation for PI SEO isn't about volume in the way it might be for a tax preparation firm or a dental practice. A firm paying $4,000–$8,000 per month for professional SEO services needs a relatively small number of signed organic cases to achieve a return on that spend. In our experience working with law firm SEO campaigns, the break-even threshold for most PI practices is one to two incremental signed cases per quarter — depending on case mix and average settlement value in their market.
That context shapes everything that follows. It also explains why ROI modeling for PI SEO is best done case-value-first, not traffic-first. Ranking for high-volume informational terms that never convert to consultations doesn't move your revenue. Ranking for high-intent, high-specificity queries — like "truck accident lawyer [city]" or "who pays medical bills after a car accident in [state]" — captures people at the moment they're ready to hire.
Note: Case values and fee structures vary significantly by jurisdiction, case type, and individual firm agreements. The figures discussed here are illustrative ranges drawn from industry benchmarks, not guarantees of any specific outcome.