SEO for law firms that takes regulation, intent and competition seriously.
Specialist SEO for UK solicitors and law firms — built around how legal buyers actually search, what the SRA expects, and how Google treats legal as a regulated, YMYL category.
Why SEO matters for law firms
For most legal services, search is the first — and sometimes only — channel a client uses before they pick up the phone.
High-intent search drives the enquiries
Clients rarely browse for a solicitor. They search with intent: “family lawyer Manchester”, “personal injury solicitor near me”. If you’re not visible at that moment, you don’t exist.
Local pack is the local market
For regional and high-street firms, Google’s local pack is often where 80% of enquiries originate. Local SEO and Maps visibility are not optional.
AI assistants are now in the mix
Clients increasingly ask ChatGPT or Perplexity “who are the best [practice area] solicitors in [city]?” before they ever hit Google. Being mentioned in those answers is the new visibility frontier.
What’s different about SEO for law
Legal SEO has constraints that consumer or e-commerce SEO doesn’t. Knowing them is half the work.
- 01YMYL categoryGoogle holds legal content to higher quality and authority standards than nearly any other category. E-E-A-T isn’t a buzzword here — it’s the ranking signal.
- 02SRA compliancePromotional content has rules — misleading comparisons, unsupported success claims, improper review handling. SEO copy and conversion pages have to be drafted with those rules in mind.
- 03Practice areas are independent search marketsFamily, personal injury, conveyancing, employment, corporate — each is its own search space, its own competition, its own buyer journey. The architecture has to reflect that.
- 04Hyperlocal intentClients want a solicitor in their area — sometimes their specific town. Multi-office firms need a location architecture that ranks for each office without cannibalising the others.
- 05Reviews matter, but the SRA has viewsReviews are a major local ranking signal — but solicitor review handling is regulated. Done badly, you risk both compliance and visibility.
- 06Author and firm credentialsSRA registration, Law Society accreditations, specialism panels, professional bodies. These belong on the page, in schema, and in entity signals.
How I typically work with law firms
A combination of services usually, depending on what’s already in place and where the gap is.
SEO Audit
The usual starting point — deep diagnostic with a prioritised plan, including practice area and local performance review.
Learn moreLocal SEO
Google Business Profile, location pages and local pack visibility — the bread and butter of regional firm growth.
Learn moreContent Strategy
Practice area architecture, SRA-aware briefs, and the kind of content that ranks in legal without falling foul of the rules.
Learn moreAI Search Optimisation
Get cited in ChatGPT, Perplexity and AI Overviews when prospects research solicitors in your patch.
Learn moreSchema Markup
LegalService, Attorney, FAQ and LocalBusiness schema built properly — for SERP features and accurate AI parsing.
Learn moreDigital PR
Coverage in legal trade press (Law Society Gazette, Legal Futures), expert commentary, data-led campaigns.
Learn moreWho I work with in law.
Independent and boutique law firms across the UK — practice areas where trust is built in research.
You’re the kind of client this works for
- Independent or boutique law firms in England, Wales or Scotland
- Practice areas with considered-purchase clients (private client, family, commercial, employment, conveyancing, immigration)
- Marketing managers, partners or practice managers leading the work
- SRA-compliant, no-hype approach to content
This probably isn’t the right service for you
- Volume claims firms chasing high-frequency keywords with thin content
- Firms wanting content that misrepresents legal expertise
- You expect first-page rankings in 30 days
- No willingness to update content as the law changes
Common questions from law firm clients
Do you understand SRA rules?
Yes. I’m not your compliance lead — that’s your COLP — but I know what gets firms in trouble: misleading specialism claims, improper review use, comparative advertising that doesn’t substantiate. Content briefs and SEO copy are written with those constraints baked in, and signed off by your compliance team before publishing.
How do you handle multiple practice areas?
Each practice area is its own hub. A clear top-level page (e.g. Family Law), focused sub-pages for sub-services (divorce, prenuptial, child arrangements), and proper internal linking so authority flows through the cluster. Larger firms also benefit from team-member-led content within each practice.
We’ve got six offices — what’s the architecture?
One location page per office, each with proper LocalBusiness schema and a matching, fully-optimised Google Business Profile. Avoid the common mistake of using identical content across location pages — that’s a near-instant local ranking ceiling.
Can we rank for personal injury / divorce / conveyancing in our area?
It depends on the competition and the depth of work needed. I’ll be honest in the audit — sometimes you can, sometimes you’d be better targeting a more specific niche where the gap is real. Pretending everything is achievable is how clients get burned.
How do reviews work given the SRA rules?
You can ask for reviews and use them publicly, but you have to manage them honestly, not misleadingly, and respond appropriately to negative ones. I’ll set up the right process and the right schema so reviews build local visibility properly.
What clients actually say.
Real reviews from firms I have worked with. 4.8 out of 5 across Google, Facebook and Yell.
“Extremely helpful would highly recommend for SEO services, my business ranking went up, and more customers started calling.”
“We have been working with Gregg for a few months now — he is really actively trying to increase our profile on Google. We always find him easily contactable and approachable.”
Working in this sector? Let’s talk.
Thirty minutes. No pitch deck. I’ll tell you honestly whether I can help your firm.