Getting found on Google - honest advice for therapists
SEO for therapy websites is not as complicated as it's often made to sound - but it's also not a magic switch. This page gives you a realistic picture of what's possible, what's not, and how to give your site the best possible chance of being found by the right clients.
I help therapists think through their SEO strategy before and during the build - so the site is designed around how clients actually search, not just how it looks.
Niche and location terms are very achievable for most therapists
A well-built site with the right foundations will outrank a badly built one
Your domain name, page titles and content all make a real difference
Broad terms like "therapist London" are highly competitive - realistic expectations matter
Results take time - typically 3-6 months before you see meaningful movement
No one can guarantee rankings - anyone who does is misleading you
Why niche and location terms are your biggest opportunity
The biggest mistake therapists make with SEO is trying to rank for broad terms like "therapist" or "counsellor" - terms with enormous competition from directories, the NHS and established practices. The smarter approach is to target the specific terms your ideal clients are actually typing.
The key insight: someone searching "EMDR therapist Nottingham" is much closer to booking than someone searching "therapist". A lower volume term with high intent is more valuable than a high volume term with low intent. Five enquiries a month from targeted searches beats fifty visitors who never contact you.
What actually makes a difference
These are the foundations every therapy website needs in place - the things that make a real, measurable difference to how Google sees and ranks your site.
Your domain name is a ranking signal. A domain like emdrtherapistbristol.co.uk or anxietytherapymanchester.co.uk tells Google exactly what you do and where. It's not essential - a name-based domain works fine - but a keyword-rich domain does give you a small but genuine advantage, especially in local searches.
The page title is the single most important on-page SEO element. Every page on your site should have a unique title that includes your target term - ideally in the format: What you do - Where you are | Your name. For example: EMDR Therapist in Nottingham | Sarah Jones Therapy.
Instead of listing everything you offer on one page, create a separate page for each specialism - anxiety, depression, trauma, EMDR, CBT, couples therapy and so on. Each page can rank independently for its own terms, and the combined effect significantly increases your overall visibility.
Google needs to understand where you work. Your location should appear naturally in your page copy, your page titles, your Google Business Profile and your site footer. If you offer online therapy, say so explicitly - "online therapy across the UK" opens up the whole country as your catchment area.
Google uses page speed and mobile experience as ranking factors. A slow, poorly coded site will rank lower than a fast one with equivalent content. This is one of the most overlooked aspects of therapy website SEO - and one of the most controllable. A properly built WordPress site with good hosting will load in under 2 seconds on mobile.
Blog posts and resource pages that answer the questions your ideal clients are asking - "what is EMDR therapy?", "how do I know if I need a therapist?", "what happens in a first therapy session?" - drive long-tail search traffic and build authority over time. You don't need to post weekly. Four or five well-written articles a year makes a real difference.
Links from reputable sites back to yours are a major ranking factor. For therapists, the most accessible source is the professional directories - Psychology Today, Counselling Directory, BACP's find a therapist, UKCP. Make sure your listing on each links back to your website. These are trusted domains and a link from each is genuinely valuable.
Google Search Console is free and tells you exactly what search terms people are using to find your site, which pages are ranking and where. Setting it up takes 10 minutes and the data is invaluable - you'll see what's working and what needs attention. I set this up and submit your sitemap as part of every build.
How to assess your realistic chance of ranking
Before investing time and money in SEO it's worth doing a simple reality check. The good news is that most therapists in most locations can rank well - it's about choosing the right terms, not just any terms.
Open an incognito browser tab and search for the term you want to rank for - "CBT therapist Derby" for example. Look at what comes up. If the first page is all directories (Psychology Today, Counselling Directory, BACP) with no individual therapist websites - that's actually good news. Directories dominate but individual sites can often break through with the right SEO.
If individual therapist websites are already ranking on page one for your target term, click through and assess them honestly. Are they well built, fast and well written - or are they old, slow and thin on content? If the competing sites are weak, you can outrank them with a properly built site. If they're strong and well established, you may need to go more niche.
Search your term and look at the number of results Google reports at the top of the page. Under 100,000 results is generally a low competition term - achievable with good SEO. Over 1 million starts getting harder. Over 10 million and you need a very well-established domain to compete for that exact term.
If your first choice term looks too competitive, add specificity. "Therapist Sheffield" becomes "trauma therapist Sheffield" becomes "EMDR trauma therapist Sheffield". Each step adds specificity, reduces competition and - crucially - attracts a more targeted enquiry from someone who is specifically looking for what you offer.
The best SEO strategy for a therapist isn't about maximum traffic - it's about attracting the clients you're best placed to help. A site designed around your actual specialism, your actual location and the actual clients you want to work with will be more effective - and more satisfying - than one trying to appeal to everyone.
SEO strategy is part of every site build - not an add-on. Before I start building I'll talk through your target clients, your location, your specialisms and your competition. Together we'll identify the terms worth targeting and design the site architecture around them.
I'll look at who is currently ranking for your target terms and give you an honest view of whether your site can compete - and what it would take.
We'll identify the specific terms worth targeting based on your specialism, location and the clients you want to attract - not just generic high-volume terms.
The structure of your site - how many pages, what they're called, how they link together - has a significant effect on how well it ranks. I design this from the start with SEO in mind.
Page titles, headings, meta descriptions, image alt text and internal linking - all set up correctly on every page as standard. Not left to chance or plugins to guess at.
For therapists who want to keep improving their rankings over time - monthly content, technical audits and ranking reports. From £150 per month.