Real Estate
Real Estate SEO: How Agents Actually Rank in Their Own Market
By the Coast Creative team6 min read
Search 'homes for sale in [your city]' and the entire first page is portals — Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin. Many agents conclude SEO is pointless. That conclusion misreads the game: you don't have to outrank Zillow for the searches Zillow wins. You have to win the searches where a person, not a portal, is the right answer.
The searches agents can actually win
'Best realtor in [town]' and '[town] listing agent' — the money searches, where searchers want a person. '[Neighborhood] real estate agent' — portals are weak at neighborhood granularity. 'Selling a house in [county] checklist,' 'relocating to [city] guide' — question searches where genuine expertise ranks. And your own name, which every referral types, and which you should dominate completely with your site, profile, and reviews.
The neighborhood playbook
The highest-leverage asset an agent can build is a real neighborhood guide: what living there is like, schools, commute reality, what homes actually go for, your take as someone who sells there. One honest, detailed guide per farm area. These rank because portals can't write them — they have data, not knowledge — and they convert because a reader finishes thinking 'this person knows this street.' They're also exactly what AI assistants quote when someone asks about moving to your area.
The technical floor
You don't need tricks; you need the floor: a fast site, RealEstateAgent schema markup with your service areas, listing pages on your own domain (an IDX decision — choose a vendor that supports it), a complete Google Business Profile, and reviews that keep arriving. Most agent sites are missing three of those five, which is why the agents who have all five look unbeatable locally.
Patience, with compounding
Real estate SEO is a farm, not a flash sale. A neighborhood guide written this spring wins its first calls by fall and keeps producing for years — the opposite economics of buying leads, where the meter resets every month. Start with your name, your profile, and one great guide for the area you most want to own. Then add the next one.
