
June 30, 2026
When someone moves to a new neighborhood and needs a dentist, they don’t flip through a directory or ask a neighbor first. They pull out their phone, type “dentist near me,” and call whoever shows up. If your practice isn’t in those results, that patient books with someone else — and they may never know you exist.
SEO for dentists is how you change that. It’s the process of making sure your practice appears when people in your area search for the care you provide. This guide covers what actually matters in 2026 — from your Google Business Profile to patient reviews to the service pages on your website — and explains why each one works in plain language, without assuming you have a marketing team behind you.
Most businesses compete nationally or regionally for traffic. Dental practices compete within a few miles. That sounds limiting, but it’s actually an advantage: the geographic boundary on your competition is smaller, which means a relatively modest SEO effort goes further than it would for a business trying to rank across an entire state.
Google knows this. When someone searches “dentist near me” or “family dentist in [city],” Google serves results based on three things: how relevant your practice is to the search, how close you are to the person searching, and how much trust signals like reviews and citations you’ve built online. You don’t need to be a marketing expert to improve any of these. You need to be consistent.
The other thing worth knowing upfront: patients now find dentists through more than Google search. According to BrightLocal’s 2026 Local Consumer Review Survey, 45% of consumers now use ChatGPT or other AI tools for local business recommendations. That number is climbing. When someone asks an AI assistant to recommend a dentist nearby, it draws on much of the same data that Google uses — your Google Business Profile, your reviews, and how your practice is described across the web. Getting the basics right for Google search also makes you more visible to AI tools simultaneously.
Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is the single highest-impact place to focus first. It’s the listing that appears in Google Maps and in the local pack — the block of three businesses that shows up at the top of local search results. Research from Google shows that complete Business Profiles are 70% more likely to attract location visits and 50% more likely to lead to a purchase. For a dental practice, that means phone calls and booked appointments.
Claim and verify your listing at business.google.com if you haven’t already. Then work through each section:
Business name: Use your real practice name, exactly as it appears on your signage and website. Don’t add keywords to your business name — Google will suspend profiles that do this, and it reads as spam to potential patients.
Categories: Your primary category matters more than almost any other field. If you’re a general dentist, select “Dentist.” If you specialize, select the most specific category available. Add secondary categories for every legitimate service your practice offers — pediatric dentistry, orthodontics, cosmetic dentistry — so you appear in those searches too.
Address and phone number: Make sure these match exactly what’s on your website and every other online listing. Even small differences (Suite vs Ste, for example) can confuse Google’s systems and weaken your local ranking.
Hours: Keep these accurate and update them before holidays. Google uses your hours data to decide when to show your profile in real-time results. A practice that appears “closed” during operating hours loses visibility when it matters most.
Services: Fill in the services section completely. Write a short, plain-language description for each service you offer. Google parses these descriptions and uses them to match your profile to more specific searches — “teeth whitening near me,” “emergency dentist,” “dental implants” — beyond just the broad category.
Photos: Practices with photos receive significantly more direction requests and calls than those without. Upload images of your exterior, reception area, treatment rooms, and staff. Patients use photos to decide whether a practice feels right for them before they ever call.
Posts: Use the posts feature to share updates, offers, or news from the practice. Posting regularly signals to Google that your profile is active, which supports your ranking. It doesn’t need to be daily — once or twice a month is enough.
Reviews are one of the strongest ranking signals in local SEO, and they do double duty: they influence where you appear in search results and they influence whether patients actually choose you once they find you. A practice with 150 reviews averaging 4.7 stars will consistently outrank an equally optimized practice with 30 reviews averaging 4.2.
The most effective approach is to ask. Most satisfied patients won’t think to leave a review unless prompted. A simple, direct ask — either in person after an appointment or in a follow-up text or email — converts at a surprisingly high rate. Make it easy by sending a direct link to your Google review page rather than expecting patients to find it themselves.
Respond to every review, positive and negative. For positive reviews, a short, genuine thank-you is enough. For negative reviews, respond calmly and professionally, acknowledge the patient’s concern, and offer to resolve it offline. How you handle a negative review often tells a prospective patient more about your practice than the complaint itself.
In 2026, reviews are also a primary data source for AI recommendations. When a patient asks ChatGPT to find a dentist nearby, the AI synthesizes information from your GBP, your website, and your reviews to decide whether to recommend you. A consistent stream of genuine, recent reviews — not just a large total from three years ago — signals an active, trustworthy practice to both Google and AI tools.
Your GBP is the storefront; your website is the building behind it. Google cross-references both to verify that your practice is legitimate and relevant. A weak website holds back even a well-optimized GBP.
The most important pages on a dental practice’s website for SEO purposes are the service pages. A single “Services” page that lists everything you offer is a missed opportunity. Each significant service deserves its own page — general dentistry, cosmetic dentistry, teeth whitening, dental implants, emergency dental care — because each one can rank independently for the searches patients make.
Each service page should:
Beyond service pages, your homepage and contact page should include your full practice name, address, and phone number (NAP) in text that search engines can read. Don’t put this information only in an image or a footer graphic — it needs to be readable by Google’s crawlers.
Keyword research for a dental practice doesn’t need to be complicated. Most of your highest-value searches follow a simple pattern: service + location. Think “pediatric dentist [city],” “emergency dental care [neighborhood],” “teeth cleaning near [landmark or area].”
Use Google’s autocomplete to find variations — start typing your core services into the search bar and see what Google suggests. The “People Also Ask” box on a results page shows real questions patients are searching for, and these make natural additions to your FAQ section or service page content.
Focus on the searches that reflect genuine patient intent: someone looking for an emergency dentist is ready to book immediately. Someone searching “how much does a dental implant cost” is in an earlier research phase. Both are worth targeting, but they need different types of content — one needs a clear service page with your contact information, the other needs an honest informational page that answers the cost question and then invites them to book a consultation.
A citation is any mention of your practice name, address, and phone number on another website. Citations appear in directories like Yelp, Healthgrades, ZocDoc, Vitals, the Better Business Bureau, and your local Chamber of Commerce. Google cross-references these to verify that your business information is consistent and that your practice is real.
The most important thing about citations is consistency. If your address appears as “123 Main Street Suite 4” on your website and “123 Main St #4” on Yelp, that inconsistency weakens Google’s confidence in your listing. Go through your major directory listings and make sure your name, address, and phone number are identical across all of them.
Dental-specific directories are worth prioritizing. Healthgrades, Zocdoc, and Vitals are commonly used by patients searching for healthcare providers, and listings on these platforms also feed into AI recommendation systems that pull from trusted healthcare sources.
If you’re starting from zero, work in this order:
None of this requires a marketing agency or a large budget. It requires consistency and follow-through. The practices that dominate local dental search in 2026 aren’t necessarily the ones spending the most on advertising — they’re the ones with complete, accurate, active profiles and a steady stream of genuine patient reviews.
If you’d like help getting there faster, or if you want a second set of eyes on what’s holding your practice back in local search, contact Rose & Cactus. We work with local businesses across a range of industries and can tell you quickly where the gaps are.
We’re not here to follow trends. We’re here to build strategies that bring bold results and lasting growth. Whether you need a complete overhaul or just a strategic boost, Rose & Cactus is ready to deliver.
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