Local SEO: why your site should have a store locator

In our recent post about local landing pages, we explained what they are and how you can set them up. These pages can be seen as a part of local SEO, which focuses on increasing your local visibility. Today I want to discuss another factor that can help you with local SEO: adding a store locator to your site. So, let’s talk about what it is and why you should consider using it.

A helpful tool for your visitors

A store locator is a tool to add to one or more pages of your site as it can help your local SEO efforts. One that is particularly helpful if you have more than one location. It allows people to search for the nearest store and plan their route to this location. To give you an example, this is the store locator Levi’s has on their site:

store locator on levis site
The store locator on the Levi’s site

Why is it important for your visitors?

Imagine this: you need a new pair of jeans and you’ve heard great stories about Levi’s. So you want to check them out. An easy first step is to visit their website. This gives you an idea of the types of jeans they offer and the prices of their products. In this case, because Levi’s also has an online shop, you are able to buy their jeans online and have them shipped to your home address. But, if you’re like me, you might enjoy (or have more success) going to a store and trying on a few jeans before you decide which ones you want to buy. So, where can you find a location near you? Luckily, there’s a ‘Find Stores & Services’ item in the menu bar, which takes you to a page with a store locator!

Offering people this tool is essential if your business depends on customers actually setting foot in your store. Because people won’t have to leave your site to find the nearest location to them. This improves their trust and experience with your brand, as you’re making it very easy to find the information they’re looking for. Which can be an address to visit or contact information to directly contact you. And by building that trust and providing the information they’re looking for right away, you’re also decreasing the chance of them leaving your site to check out the site of possible competitors. So, focus on user experience to help visitors find what they’re looking for and keeping them on your site.

Why is it important for your findability?

Let’s start by saying that what benefits your site visitors is most important, and will, therefore, benefit your rankings. Google and other search engines want to serve people the best result for their search. That means that optimizing your site for visitors will also lead to higher rankings, so focusing on every aspect of your site will definitely pay off. We call this a holistic SEO approach and strongly believe that this will get you furthest with your SEO.

That being said, there’s another way in which your store locator can strengthen and increase your rankings. By using structured data. Now, this gets a bit more technical, but to explain it in a few words: structured data helps search engines understand your location and other important information right away. Which helps them combine that information and present it in the search results. And the easier you make this for Google and other search engines, the easier it is for them to see your page as a matching result for people searching online.

Read more: Structured data with Schema.org: the ultimate guide »

Structured data is not added to your site automatically. Luckily there are plugins that can help you with this. For example, our local SEO plugin, that uses structured data to show the locations and opening hours of your store. And makes it possible to add a store locator to any page you want. Let’s have a look at how this works!

How to use the Yoast store locator

The Local SEO plugin helps you optimize your site for a local audience, and one of its features is the store locator. After installing the plugin, just upload a CSV file with all the details or type them in on WordPress. After doing so, you can simply go to a page in the block editor in WordPress and add the Structured Data Block for the Store locator:

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is structured-data-block-store-locator-600x582.png

When you click on this block, you will see the following screen that allows you to determine the settings of your store locator. Such as the maximum number of results, the type of map you want to display and the information you want to show:

the structured data block store locator in Yoast SEO

For even more information on adding the Store locator in Gutenberg, or about adding it in the classic editor, go to our help page on this tool. If you’re interested in what the store locator will look like on your page, go to our live Local SEO demo to have a look!

Setting a primary location & shared properties

Recently, we’ve released a new version of our Local SEO plugin with two new features. The first is that you can now set one of your locations as your primary location (e.g., a ‘head office’). Our plugin will add the correct data or the primary location and your other locations.

The second feature that has been recently added is the introduction of shared properties for multiple locations. For example: shared opening hours or shared business information like a phone number or email address. Of course, you can always manually override these shared properties per location.

For those of you who own a business directory

Using a store locator isn’t limited to listing your own business or businesses. If you own a business directory (for example all the dentists in Los Angeles or car dealers in Arizona) you can still use this tool to list them. With our Local SEO plugin, you can add these locations as described above: by importing them or entering them one by one. After this, you can add the store locator to the (category)pages you want.

A small remark: it may be harder to rank in local search when you don’t own those places, but it’s still a very user-friendly feature for your visitors.

Conclusion on the use of a store locator

To recap, adding a store locator to your site helps site visitors quickly find your nearest store. This improves their experience with your site (and with it brand) and this focus on user experience will help you improve your rankings. Also, by using a plugin that adds your store locator with the use of structured data, you’re helping search engines understand your page even more. Which will also benefit your rankings. Our Local SEO plugin can do this for you and is also able to help you with other aspects of your local SEO.

I hope this article has helped your understanding of the store locator and why you should use it. Good luck and if you feel like there is still something missing in our Local SEO plugin: please leave your suggestions in the comments!

Keep reading: more articles on Local SEO »

Coming up next!


22 Responses to Local SEO: why your site should have a store locator

  1. Link
    Link  • 4 years ago

    Thankyou for such an informative article.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      You’re welcome!!

  2. Chris vinson
    Chris vinson  • 4 years ago

    Great Article. I’ll try if for some clients.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      Thanks and good luck! :)

  3. Shannon Hartigan
    Shannon Hartigan  • 4 years ago

    Always great info! Thank you.
    One question…if you have only 1 location should you still use a locator or is a map the best solution?

    • Willemien Hallebeek
      Willemien Hallebeek  • 4 years ago

      In that case a map will do, Shannon!

  4. Elle
    Elle  • 4 years ago

    Are you penalised by Google if you are an ‘online only’ store with no place for customer to visit so cannot use local SEO or Store Locator? How do I get round this?

    • Willemien Hallebeek
      Willemien Hallebeek  • 4 years ago

      Hi Elle, you won’t get penalized. You will just be one online store of many! So, in this case, you’ll have to do your best to stand out from the other online shops. Perhaps focusing on a niche would be a good strategy then: https://yoast.com/find-shop-niche/ Also this guide might be a good read: https://yoast.com/ecommerce-seo-checklist/ Good luck!

  5. Gloria
    Gloria  • 4 years ago

    Hi guys! It is a great article, very useful.
    Now I have new ideas to continue improving my dog website. By the way, the Yoast SEO plugin is great!
    Nice job.

    • Willemien Hallebeek
      Willemien Hallebeek  • 4 years ago

      Thanks, Gloria. Good luck with your dog website!

  6. Ashutosh
    Ashutosh  • 4 years ago

    Hi there!
    Thanks for the informative article. Store locator is really helpful for local seo and also to increase business as well.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      You’re welcome, Ashutosh!

  7. contexters.ru
    contexters.ru  • 4 years ago

    Does this option work in all countries? For example, in Russia?
    Thanks for the great plugin.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      Hi there! Thanks for your question! This plugin works in every country and relies on Google Maps to make the store locator function work, so you should be able to use it in Russia without any trouble! If you do have issues, let us know :)

  8. Dollartrak
    Dollartrak  • 4 years ago

    I just wanted to say that I I love the pirate graphic main picture above. Well done!

  9. Ashish
    Ashish  • 4 years ago

    Very useful and informative article. Must read.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      That’s great to hear, Ashish, thank you!

  10. Andrew
    Andrew  • 4 years ago

    Great article, had no idea about this! Thanks for sharing.

    • Camille Cunningham
      Camille Cunningham  • 4 years ago

      You’re welcome, Andrew! Glad to be of help :)

  11. Shubham Singh
    Shubham Singh  • 4 years ago

    Frankly saying before this article I didn’t know anything about store locator but thanks to you for choosing this topic on which almost no one is writing
    Will love to see more articles like this
    Cheers, Shubham