A real estate website SEO audit identifies the technical, on-page, and content issues that prevent a property website from ranking on Google. It provides a prioritised fix list so real estate agents, brokerages, and investors know exactly what to address first — without guessing or wasting budget on the wrong problems.
You’ve invested in a real estate website, maybe added blogs, area pages, and property listings—but you’re still buried in search results. Without a proper SEO audit, you don’t really know why. A slow, unstructured, or badly optimised site quietly pushes buyers and sellers to other agents and portals.
You share your website, main city/areas, ideal clients (buyers, sellers, tenants, landlords), and what you want SEO to achieve. I use this to shape the lens of the audit.
I review how your site currently ranks for core real estate keywords and locations. This shows what Google already understands about your brand—and what it doesn’t.
I check key technical elements: site speed, mobile experience, indexing issues, broken links, URL structure, and basic Core Web Vitals. The goal is to see whether search engines can easily crawl, read, and trust your site.
I analyse your main pages: Home, Services, Area/Neighbourhood pages, Listings/Portfolio, About, and Contact. I look at titles, headings, meta descriptions, internal links, keyword usage, and overall clarity for both users and search engines.
I review how easy it is for visitors to find information, browse listings, and contact you. I flag friction points that might be stopping people from booking viewings or requesting valuations.
You receive a structured report with: what’s working, what’s broken or missing, what to fix first, plus clear recommendations written in simple language, not developer-only jargon.
Most real estate websites have SEO issues that are invisible to the owner but clearly visible to Google. A structured audit surfaces these problems in order of impact — so time and budget go toward fixes that actually move rankings, not cosmetic changes.
For agents whose audit reveals weak domain authority alongside on-page issues, backlinks become part of the recovery strategy. Property-specific link acquisition directs authority toward the exact pages identified as high-priority in the audit report.
A real estate website SEO audit is most valuable for property businesses that have an existing website but are not seeing the rankings, traffic, or enquiries their site should be generating.
Every real estate website SEO audit includes a written report covering all major ranking factors — from technical health to content gaps — with recommendations prioritised by impact.
Investors whose audit surfaces thin content and poor local intent signals need a content strategy built around motivated seller searches. Seller-focused property SEO addresses the content and keyword gaps that generic audit recommendations typically miss for investment-focused websites.
A thorough audit covers technical health, on-page optimisation, content quality, internal linking, and how well service and location pages are structured. It also checks mobile usability, page speed, and calls to action that affect how visitors convert. Ayesha Batool's audit covers all three layers: technical, on-page, and content.
Area pages are dedicated pages on your website targeting specific towns, neighbourhoods, or postcodes where you operate. Without them, your website has no on-page evidence that you serve those areas, which limits your local rankings. Each page needs to be genuinely useful and location-specific because duplicate pages with only the place name changed will not perform.
An SEO audit is useful for any real estate business that relies on organic search to attract leads, regardless of company size. Smaller agencies often benefit more because they tend to have straightforward sites with a handful of fixable issues that can make a meaningful difference quickly. A priority-based fix list helps smaller teams focus on what will move the needle first.
The audit report includes a priority-based fix list categorised as high, medium, and low impact, so you know exactly where to start. High-priority issues are those most likely blocking rankings or causing significant traffic loss. This structure is particularly useful if your team has limited time or budget and needs to sequence work strategically.
Most full-service SEO agencies serve multiple industries and apply generalised audit frameworks across clients. Ayesha Batool works exclusively in real estate, meaning the audit criteria, fix recommendations, and content guidance are built specifically for property businesses. The reports are also written to be readable by non-technical stakeholders, not just developers.