How Local SEO For Small Businesses Actually Works In 2026

Local SEO is the process of getting your business to show up on Google, in Google Maps, and now in AI search engines like ChatGPT and Google’s AI Overviews, when someone nearby is searching for what you do.

Author Jude Wates

Whether it's writing blog posts, analysing Instagram data, or showing someone how to update their Google Business Profile, I love to help our customers get found online.

Jude Wates

Local SEO for small businesses is the process of getting your business to show up on Google, in Google Maps, and now in AI search engines like ChatGPT and Google’s AI Overviews, when someone nearby is searching for what you do. It is the single most cost-effective way for a small business to get found by people who are actively looking to buy. In 2026, the rules have shifted because AI search is in the mix too, but the fundamentals still come down to three things, your Google Business Profile, the words on your website, and the signals that tell Google you are a real, trusted business in a real, trusted place. Here we can help you to find out how all of that actually works, and what you should do if you are not getting found locally.

Why local SEO matters more than ever in 2026.

Most small businesses do not need to rank for “plumber UK” or “accountant nationwide”. They need to rank for “plumber in Heathfield” or “accountant near me”. That is what local SEO does, and that is where the enquiries come from. If you are looking for a company who specialises in Local SEO for small businesses then read on!

The shift this year is that the way people search has changed. Half the searches still happen on Google. The other half are now split across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews and a growing list of AI tools that pull information from the web and serve it up as a direct answer. If your local presence is not optimised for both, you are invisible to a huge chunk of your customers. The good news is that the same foundations that win on Google also win on AI, so the work is not double, it is joined up.

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What our clients have to say.

Real feedback from satisfied customers who’ve experienced first-hand how our solutions have made a difference.

  • I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend Jude and the rest of the digital marketing team at Sokada. We’ve seen a significant increase in traffic both to our website and social media channels since we’ve started using their services. Jude and the team are extremely experienced and knowledgeable but offer a very personal service and are always available to deal with any last-minute requests we may have. I really appreciate all of their hard work and look forward to continuing to work with them over the coming months.

    Alexandra Funnell
    Alexandra Funnell Hart Reade Solicitors
  • From my first sit-down meeting, I felt at ease and 100% confident I had gone to the right place.

    I have been working with Julian for the last few months to build the website and marketing for my new business. Julian has a wealth of experience and is extremely knowledgeable in all areas based around this. From my first sit-down meeting, I felt at ease and 100% confident I had gone to the right place. I am looking forward to continuing my working relationship with Sokada.

    Ben Humphrey Chimneasy

The Google Business Profile Is The Foundation.

If you do nothing else, get this right.

Your Google Business Profile is the listing that shows up on the right when somebody Googles your business by name. It is also the thing that powers the local map pack, the three businesses that appear in a little map at the top of local searches. It is free. It is essential. And most small businesses fill it in once, badly, and never touch it again.

To get it working properly you need the exact business name without any keyword stuffing, a real address (even if you work from home and only show it as an area-served business), a working phone number, accurate opening hours kept up to date, a primary category that matches what you actually do, secondary categories for everything else you offer, high quality photos added regularly, a proper service area if you visit clients, service descriptions filled in fully, posts published regularly like a mini social feed, and reviews coming in steadily with you replying to every one.

Google uses your Profile as a major signal of legitimacy. A neglected profile tells Google you might not even be in business anymore and believe us when we say they are getting stricter with everything! A well kept one tells Google you are active, trustworthy and worth showing.

NAP Consistency Across The Web.

NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone. Boring abbreviation, important concept.

Google checks your business name, address and phone number across the entire web. If you are listed as Smith Plumbing Ltd on one directory, Smith Plumbing Limited on another, and just Smith Plumbing on a third, that inconsistency makes Google less confident about who you actually are. The same goes for old phone numbers that still show up on Yell, Thomson Local, or some local trade directory you signed up to in 2017 and forgot about.

The fix is unglamorous. Audit every directory, citation and listing your business is on. Make them all match. Update anything that is out of date. It is dull work, but it really helps.

Reviews Are Now The Loudest Local Ranking Signal.

The single biggest local ranking factor in 2026, by a wide margin, is reviews. The volume of reviews, the recency of reviews, the star rating, and the actual words used in those reviews all feed into where Google ranks you.

Two businesses on the same street, doing the same thing, with the same website quality, will rank differently if one has 74 recent reviews averaging 4.9 stars and the other has 8 reviews from three years ago. Google trusts the busy one more. AI engines do the same. When ChatGPT recommends a local business, it weighs reviews heavily.

So the work here is structural. You need a process for asking every happy customer for a review. Not a hopeful “let us know if you enjoyed it” email. A proper structured ask, with a direct link to your Google review page, sent at the right moment when the customer is happiest. And when reviews come in, you reply to every one, including the negative ones. That last bit matters as much as everything else; are you now understanding, Local SEO for small businesses is all pretty vital.

Not getting enough enquiries?

Book a free audit and we’ll spend 30 minutes going through your website, telling you exactly what’s holding it back and what we’d do to fix it.

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Case studies.

Behind every one of these is a business owner who was frustrated, not getting enough enquiries, and needed someone to actually sort it. We’re proud of every single one.

All case studies

Troys Trees & Hedge Services

Local Content On Your Website.

Your Google Business Profile sits alongside your website, not in place of it. Google still wants to look at your site to understand what you do and where you do it. So the website needs to send the same local signals.

That means a clearly written About page that says where you are based, service pages that mention the towns and areas you serve, location pages if you serve multiple distinct areas, LocalBusiness schema markup in the code, a footer with your full address and phone number on every page, embedded Google Maps where appropriate, and internal linking that connects your service pages to your location pages.

A common mistake we see is a site that talks about “what we do” in detail but never properly says where the business actually is. Google needs both. AI engines need both. Customers need both.

On-page SEO With A Local Angle.

The basics of on-page SEO still apply. Title tags, meta descriptions, H1s, image alt text, internal linking, all of it. The local angle just means weaving the location naturally through the page.

So a plumber in Heathfield should not just have a page called “Boiler Repair”. They should have “Boiler Repair In Heathfield And Across The Weald”. The H1, the title tag, the meta description, the first paragraph, all naturally mention the place. Not stuffed, just make sure it is present. Customers searching from East Sussex will see a more relevant result, and Google will rank you higher for those local searches.

Find Us In Heathfield

Speed, Mobile And Core Web Vitals.

Roughly seventy percent of local searches happen on a mobile phone. If your site loads slowly on a phone, people leave. When people leave quickly, Google notices, and ranks you lower.

Google’s Core Web Vitals are the technical scores that measure how fast and stable your site feels on a real device. They are a confirmed ranking factor. A slow bloated site built on a cheap template will lose to a fast, properly built one, all other things being equal. This is why we build every site on bespoke code rather than page builders. It is also why a free Wix or Squarespace site nearly always loses to a properly built WordPress site in local search.

How AI Search Changes Local SEO in 2026.

This is the new bit, and it is where most small businesses are getting left behind.

When someone asks ChatGPT or Google’s AI Overviews “who is the best plumber in Heathfield”, the AI does not pull answers from the same place a normal Google search does. It looks at structured data on your site, mentions of your business in other trusted places online, the reviews you have got, and the clarity of the information on your pages. If your site has no schema markup, no clear service descriptions, and no consistent name and location across the web, the AI cannot confidently quote you. So it quotes your competitor instead.

The fix is what we call GEO, Generative Engine Optimisation. It is the work of making sure AI engines can read, understand and confidently quote your business. It includes full schema markup (particularly LocalBusiness, Service and FAQ Page), clear factual answers to common questions on your site, consistent business information across the web (back to NAP), a growing reputation in trustworthy places online, and content that directly answers the questions people ask AI tools.

GEO is not separate from local SEO. It is the next layer on top. And the businesses winning at this in 2026 are the ones doing both at once.

What This All Looks Like In Practice.

A small business that wins at local SEO in 2026 is doing all of the following, consistently.

Their Google Business Profile is fully completed, kept up to date, and gathering new reviews every month. Their website is fast, mobile-first, and has clear local information on every page. Their schema markup is comprehensive. They publish content that answers the actual questions their local customers are asking. They are listed accurately on all the major UK directories. And they have a steady flow of fresh reviews from happy customers, with every review replied to within a few days.

It is not glamorous work. But it is the work that moves a small business from “nobody can find us” to “we have got too many enquiries to handle”. And once you have built it, it compounds month after month.

How Long Does Local SEO Take To Work?

A new website with local SEO done well, will start to show up in local search results within four to six weeks. The map pack rankings can take longer, three to six months for competitive local terms, faster for niche ones. Reviews build over time, so the longer you have a working process for getting them, the better your local rankings get.

So local SEO is not a quick fix. It is a foundation. But it is the most reliable, lowest cost foundation a small business can build, and it keeps paying off for years after the initial work is done.

Where To Start If You Are Doing None Of This.

Pick one thing this week. Go and update your Google Business Profile properly. That is the highest impact single action you can take in an hour. Get the basics right, add new photos, fill in every field, write proper service descriptions, and put a post up.

Then look at your website. Is your address and phone number on every page? Is your service page named after both what you do and where you do it? Are you using LocalBusiness schema in the code? If you do not know, our lead generation audit will tell you exactly what is missing and what to do next.

If you want a proper second opinion, book a free audit with us. We will spend 30 minutes going through your local SEO setup, tell you what is working and what is not, and give you a clear view of what it would take to start bringing in proper local enquiries. No hard sell. No obligation. Just an honest look at where you stand.

Not getting enough enquiries?

Book a free audit and we’ll spend 30 minutes going through your website, telling you exactly what’s holding it back and what we’d do to fix it.

Book your free audit

FAQs.

How much does local SEO cost for a small business?

For a small business in the UK, local SEO with an agency typically costs between £400 and £1,500 a month, depending on how competitive your area and niche are. Doing it yourself costs nothing but time, and time is usually where small business owners get stuck. The cost of getting it wrong is much higher than the cost of doing it well, because every month you are invisible to local search is a month of enquiries going to your competitors.

Can I do local SEO myself or do I need to hire someone?

You can do most of it yourself if you have the time and the willingness. Updating your Google Business Profile, asking for reviews, fixing your NAP across directories, and adding your address to every page of your website are all jobs a small business owner can do. The technical bits, like schema markup, Core Web Vitals fixes, and AI search optimisation, are harder to do well without a developer. Honestly, most owners can do about 60 percent of the work themselves, and the rest is worth paying somebody to do properly.

What is the difference between SEO and local SEO?

SEO is the broader process of getting your website to rank on Google for any search. Local SEO is the specific work of getting your business to rank for searches with local intent, like “plumber near me” or “East Sussex accountant”. Local SEO uses your Google Business Profile, location signals, reviews, and local directory listings on top of the standard SEO work. If your customers find you within a specific geographic area, local SEO is what you need most.

Do I need a physical address to do local SEO?

No, but you do need a registered business address that Google can verify. If you run a service-area business like a plumber, electrician, cleaner or mobile mechanic, you can hide your address in your Google Business Profile and just show the areas you serve. Service-area businesses can rank in local search just as well as ones with a shopfront, as long as they get the rest of the local SEO foundation right.

How do I get more Google reviews for my small business?

Make asking part of your normal process. After every completed job or sale, send the customer a short email thanking them and include a direct link to your Google review page. The link matters, because asking somebody to “Google us and leave a review” usually results in nothing. Make it one click. The best moment to ask is right after they have told you they are happy, not weeks later when the feeling has faded.

Local SEO For Small Businesses.

At Sokada, we help small businesses across the UK get found locally on Google and in AI search engines like ChatGPT and Google’s AI Overviews. If you are looking for a company who specialises in Local SEO for small businesses, we build the foundations properly, your Google Business Profile, your local schema, your website signals and your review process, then we keep the work going month after month so your local rankings actually move. Leads are the only measure of success that matters to us, so everything we do ties back to the enquiries it brings in.

If you are not getting enough local enquiries, book a free 30-minute audit with us. We will tell you exactly what is missing and what we would do to fix it. No hard sell, no obligation, just an honest look at where you stand.

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