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Voice search and "near me" SEO

Last updated 3 July 2026 | Websites for Trades editorial team

1 min read

"Near me" searches have grown 500%+ since 2015 and continue rising. They're a goldmine for service businesses, and the optimisation pattern is well-understood.

How Google handles "near me"

Google ignores the literal phrase "near me", it injects your location automatically. So "best plumber near me" effectively becomes "best plumber [your town]". You don't need to put "near me" in your content; you need to be locally relevant for the underlying service.

What you actually need

  • A verified, well-optimised Google Business Profile.
  • LocalBusiness schema on your homepage.
  • Pages targeting "[service] in [town]" naturally, not robotic doorway pages.
  • Mobile-fast site (most "near me" searches are on phones).
  • Click-to-call phone number prominent on mobile.
  • Click-to-direction for businesses with a physical location.

Voice search

Voice queries are usually longer and more conversational ("who can fix a leaking radiator in Bolton tonight"). Optimise by having FAQ pages that answer specific questions in clear language. Schema FAQ markup helps Google read these.

Services that fit this guide

Key terms

Useful glossary definitions for this guide.

Frequently asked questions

Should I add the words near me to my website pages?

Usually no. Google interprets near me searches using the searcher location, so your site needs strong local relevance rather than repeated near me wording.

What helps a business rank for near me searches?

A complete Google Business Profile, local service pages, consistent citations, reviews, mobile speed and click-to-call contact details all help.

Are voice search and near me SEO connected?

Yes. Voice searches are often local and conversational, so clear FAQ-style answers can help Google understand relevant service questions.