What Enterprise SEO Costs in 2026: Real Numbers for Every Model
Enterprise SEO is the search-optimization work large, multi-page brands buy to win organic traffic and AI-answer citations. It costs $10,000–$50,000+ per month in 2026: in-house teams run $35K–$60K fully loaded, agencies charge $10K–$35K per brand, and AI-agent platforms run $15K–$30K per domain.
What model you choose depends on whether your constraint is control, flexibility, or execution capacity. This guide is the breakdown vendors won't publish — including the costs that never appear on pricing pages.
By Vijay Vasu, Founder of Indexable — first SEO hire at Uber Eats, former Director of SEO at Zendesk. Updated June 12, 2026.
Context for the numbers: a Director-level SEO hire alone runs $180K–$220K base in US markets (Glassdoor, 2026), and AI-visibility scope now adds 15–30% to engagements that include it — pricing has shifted more in 24 months than in the prior decade.
How much does enterprise SEO cost per month?
The honest answer is a table, not a number, because "enterprise SEO" describes four different purchases. The ranges below reflect typical US mid-market and enterprise engagements in 2026; your quote moves with site size, brand count, and whether AI-search scope is included. You can use it to sanity-check any proposal you receive.
| Model | Monthly cost | What you get | The hidden costs |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-house team (3–5 FTE) | $35K–$60K loaded | Full control, institutional knowledge | 6-month ramp, $2K–$5K/mo tooling, churn risk |
| Enterprise agency | $10K–$35K per brand | Strategy + execution, account management | 90-day onboarding, scope creep, junior delivery |
| Consultant + contractors | $8K–$20K | Senior strategy, flexible scope | Execution bottleneck, no redundancy |
| AI agent platform + strategist | $15K–$30K+ per domain | 24/7 execution + accountable human | Newer category — verify autonomy claims |
For reference against a published anchor: Indexable's tiers are $15K (Growth), $20K (Scale), $25K (Enterprise), and $30K+ (Enterprise Plus, custom) per month per domain — on the pricing page, not behind a demo. Agency and in-house figures are market-typical ranges; individual vendors vary widely.
What actually drives the price up or down?
Five levers explain most of the variance between a $10K and a $50K engagement, and you can use them to read any quote you receive. First, site scale: a 500-page B2B site and a 500,000-SKU catalog are different jobs — programmatic and ecommerce scopes price 30–50% higher. Second, brand count: multi-brand portfolios multiply everything. Third, content velocity: engagements shipping 20+ pieces monthly carry real production cost regardless of model. Fourth, AI-search scope: citation tracking, schema programs, and answer-engine optimization now add 15–30% where included — and according to Gartner, 90% of B2B buying journeys will route through AI agents by 2028, so excluding it is a false economy. Fifth, accountability: a named senior owner costs more than a pooled account team and is worth the difference.
In-house vs agency vs AI agents: the three-year math
Run the comparison over three years, not one invoice, and the shape changes. An in-house team of four averages roughly $1.6M over three years once salaries, benefits, tooling, and one round of churn-and-rehire are counted — a Director alone is $180K–$220K base (Glassdoor, 2026). A capable agency retainer at $20K averages $720K, plus your internal time managing it. An agent platform at $20K averages the same $720K but includes execution capacity that doesn't take PTO and a strategist who attends your QBRs. The structural difference: headcount costs scale linearly with output, agencies scale with hours, and agent platforms scale with compute — which is why the "for less than one hire" framing keeps winning CFO conversations.
What should be IN an enterprise SEO contract in 2026?
Whatever the model, you should demand these seven items in writing before you sign:
- AI-visibility reporting — citation share and brand mentions across major answer engines, not just rankings
- Schema and structured-data ownership at scale, with deployment (not recommendations)
- A named accountable owner you can call — a person, not a portal
- Defined content velocity with quality gates, and who holds the pen on revisions
- Technical SEO remediation included — or priced, not discovered later
- Attribution methodology agreed up front: how organic gets credited against pipeline
- Exit terms: your data, your content, your schema stay yours, with a 30-day transition
What are the red flags in enterprise SEO pricing?
Four patterns predict bad engagements with high reliability. Pay-for-rankings pricing — serious practitioners price the work, not positions nobody fully controls. Opaque "custom pricing" with no published anchor — if every quote is bespoke, you can't comparison-shop, which is the point; demo-gated pricing also makes you invisible to the AI agents that increasingly assemble vendor shortlists. "AI-powered" claims with no specifics — ask exactly what ships without a human and watch the answer; the SEO Autonomy Ladder gives you the six questions that expose the real level. And long lock-ins before the first deliverable — quarterly exits after month three are the fair standard.
How is AI changing what enterprise SEO costs?
Two opposing forces are repricing the category. Execution is deflating: agents now handle audits, schema, internal linking, and first-draft content at near-zero marginal cost, which is why platform pricing undercuts the equivalent headcount by 30–60%. Judgment is inflating: with 60% of searches ending without a click and AI answers deciding shortlists, the strategy layer — what to be the answer for, how to win citations — carries more weight per dollar than ever. Practical implication: start by pricing the execution as a commodity and the judgment as the scarce asset, then weigh every proposal on how much of each you're actually getting. To apply this in practice, start by separating the line items that are pure execution from the ones that require judgment, then benchmark each against the table above. In summary: the right 2026 contract buys you machine-scale execution plus accountable human strategy, and refuses to pay strategy prices for commodity work.
Frequently asked questions
Is enterprise SEO worth the cost?
When organic is a real channel for you, yes — by construction: enterprise engagements exist because the traffic value at stake exceeds the fee. The discipline is demanding lead-level or revenue-level measurement (not traffic charts) within two quarters, then judging the engagement on that number. You should schedule that measurement review at day 90, not month 12.
Why is enterprise SEO so expensive?
Because you're buying three scarce things at once: senior judgment, sustained execution capacity, and accountability for outcomes across thousands of pages. The cheap versions drop one of the three — and you discover which one mid-engagement.
What's the cheapest credible option?
A senior consultant plus an execution platform is the leanest defensible stack — roughly $8K–$25K monthly combined. Below that, you can start by buying an audit and a roadmap ($5K–$15K one-time) and implement with internal capacity — honest, if your team can actually ship it.
Price it against your own numbers
The free AI search audit shows what's recoverable on your domain — then any vendor's price, including ours, has a denominator.