How Google uses proximity and relevance in local SEO
Two businesses on the same street can see completely different map results, and the difference is rarely the one thing owners fixate on. Google says out loud how it ranks local results, and understanding the three factors it names changes what you work on.
Google ranks local results using three factors it names publicly: relevance, distance, and popularity (the industry usually calls the third prominence). Relevance is how well a business matches what someone searched. Distance is how far it sits from the location behind the search. Prominence is how well-known and reputable it is. SEO Elite Agency, based in Naples, Florida, explains how these three interact and which you can influence.
What three factors does Google use to rank local results?
Google names them directly in its own guidance: relevance, distance, and popularity. Relevance is how well your business matches the search. Distance is how far you are from the location behind the query. Popularity is how well-known you are. Every local ranking is those three weighed together against one specific search from one specific place, with no fixed formula published.
This is not a leaked algorithm or an agency theory. Google states in its "Tips to improve your local ranking on Google" help documentation that local results are mainly based on relevance, distance, and popularity (Google, 2026)[1]. It is the closest thing to a public ranking rubric that exists for the map pack.
The important word is mainly. Distance is one of three factors Google names, not the only one, so it is not a hard filter that sorts by miles. On our reading of Google's own framing, a more relevant, more prominent business can out-rank a closer one, which is the entire reason optimization works.
There is no published weighting between the three. Anyone quoting an exact split of the local algorithm is estimating, not reciting Google. What we do have are survey-based approximations from practitioners, useful for direction rather than precision. Treat the three factors as the structure and the percentages as informed guesses about it.
What does relevance mean in local search, and how do you improve it?
Relevance is how well your business profile and website match what a person actually searched. Google reads your primary and secondary categories, your listed services, your business description, and the content on your site, then judges whether you answer the query. Of the three factors, relevance is the one you shape most directly, and category choice is the sharpest lever.
The primary category is the single most influential input here. In the 2026 Whitespark Local Search Ranking Factors survey, the Google Business Profile primary category ranks as the number-one local pack factor overall, and profile signals together account for roughly 32% of local pack weight (Whitespark, 2026)[2]. A cabinet maker who selects "cabinet maker" is legible to Google in a way that one who selected "contractor" is not.
Relevance is also literal. Google matches the words in a search against the words in your profile and on your pages. If people search "emergency water damage" and your profile lists "restoration services" with no mention of water or emergencies, you have handed relevance to a competitor who wrote plainly. Complete the services list, write real descriptions, and let your website say specifically what you do.
Rather than restate the full playbook here, our local SEO services page walks through categories, service lists, and local landing pages in depth. The point for this article is narrower: relevance is earned by matching language, not by adding volume.
How does distance (proximity) work, and why can't you buy your way closer?
Distance is how far your business is from the location Google attaches to a search, often the searcher's real-time GPS position, sometimes a place named in the query. It is a physical fact about where you are and where they are. You cannot purchase proximity or force Google to shorten the gap, which is why distance frustrates owners who expect money to move it.
When someone searches on a phone, Google usually knows roughly where they are standing and measures the distance to each candidate business from that point. When someone types a place into the query ("plumber in Bonita Springs"), Google uses that named location instead. Either way, proximity is calculated against a specific point, not against your idea of your market.
This is the one factor with no direct dial. Reviews can be earned, categories can be corrected, links can be built, but a business three miles from a searcher cannot become one mile away. That reality is exactly why the other two factors matter so much: they are how a business overcomes a distance disadvantage instead of surrendering to it.
What has changed is that the searcher's actual location now drives results far more than a static "center of town" ever did. Older local search leaned on a city centroid; modern local search leans on where the person is at that moment. The result is that your ranking is not one number, it is a different answer at every point on the map.
What is prominence, and how does Google measure it?
Prominence is how well-known and authoritative your business is. Google names just two inputs for that third factor: how many websites link to your business, and how many reviews you have. That is narrower than the industry usually recites, and it is the good news in this article, because links and reviews are both things a small business can earn.
Google states that the third factor is based on information like how many websites link to your business and how many reviews you have (Google, 2026)[1]. It is worth reading that literally: the two things Google names out loud are who links to you and who reviews you, so that is where the effort belongs.
Reviews are the most accessible slice of prominence for a small business. The 2026 Whitespark survey attributes roughly 20% of local pack weight to review signals (Whitespark, 2026)[2], and reviews also govern whether a searcher who finds you chooses you: 97% of consumers read reviews for local businesses, and 74% specifically look for reviews written in the last three months (BrightLocal, 2026)[3]. Recency is now part of prominence, not just volume.
Citations and links round it out. Consistent listings across directories and mentions from local and industry sources tell Google that a business is established and corroborated. Prominence is the slowest factor to build and the hardest to fake, which is precisely why it separates durable rankings from ones that evaporate the moment a competitor tries harder.
How do the query and the searcher's location interact to change results?
They interact constantly. Google evaluates relevance, distance, and prominence against both what was searched and where it was searched from, so the same business can appear first for one person and not at all for someone a mile away typing the identical query. There is no single ranking, only a ranking for a specific query at a specific point.
Consider two people searching "pediatric dentist" ten minutes apart. One is downtown, one is in a suburb. Google runs the same three factors for each, but distance is measured from two different points, so the map pack reorders itself. The businesses did nothing between the searches; the location behind the query changed, and the results followed.
The query text shifts the weighting too. A search with explicit local intent ("near me," or a named neighborhood) pushes proximity and local relevance to the front. Google is always solving for the best match to this query from this place, which is why rank tracking that ignores location is close to meaningless.
This is also why tools that check your rank from a grid of points, rather than a single spot, tell a truer story. Your visibility is a surface across your service area, high near your location and fading with distance, reshaped by how relevant and prominent you are. One reported "position" flattens a picture that is genuinely three-dimensional.
Why can't a single location rank everywhere it wants to?
Because distance is measured from your actual address, and it works against you as searches move away from it. A single storefront can dominate the blocks around it and fade steadily further out, no matter how strong its reviews and content. Relevance and prominence widen that radius, but they cannot erase geography, so one pin cannot own an entire region.
Owners often expect a great profile to rank them across a whole county. It will not, because every search outside their immediate area starts with a distance penalty relative to businesses closer to that searcher. Strong prominence buys reach (it lets you appear farther from your door than a weak competitor can), but the falloff is real and by design.
This is why honest expansion is structural, not cosmetic. A business that genuinely serves a wider area earns broader visibility through legitimately defined service areas, separate location profiles where it has real premises, and location-specific pages, not by wishing one profile ranked everywhere. Overreaching (claiming distant areas you do not really serve) dilutes relevance and can trip Google's guidelines.
The practical read is liberating once you accept it. Stop chasing a single location twenty miles away and rank where proximity actually favors you, then extend outward with real presence. Rankings that geography forbids waste the budget that could compound where you can genuinely win.
How is local (map pack) ranking different from organic ranking?
They are two separate systems on the same results page. The map pack ranks on relevance, distance, and prominence, and depends on your Google Business Profile. Organic (blue-link) results rank on the broader search algorithm, which weighs content, links, and technical quality, with distance playing a smaller, softer role. A business can top one and be absent from the other.
The map pack is profile-first. Without a Google Business Profile there is no map listing to rank, and proximity is a live factor in a way it never is for a national blog post. Organic results below the map do not require a profile at all; they rank pages, and a page can rank for a local query on content strength even when the map pack is dominated by closer competitors.
Prominence bridges the two. The links that make a business well-known are also what lift its pages in organic results, and links are one of the two inputs Google names for the factor, so the same work compounds on both surfaces. Improving your website therefore tends to help both, but through different mechanisms: directly for organic, and indirectly, via prominence, for the map.
The takeaway for planning is to treat them as complementary rather than interchangeable. Winning the map pack means tuning the profile and the three local factors; winning organic local rankings means building genuinely useful, well-structured pages. Most local businesses need both, and confusing the two is how effort ends up aimed at the wrong surface.
Can you influence proximity at all, or only relevance and prominence?
You cannot change your distance from a searcher, but you can influence how proximity plays out at the margins. Accurate service-area definitions, a correct primary category, and a consistent address tell Google precisely where and for what you should be considered. That does not move you closer; it makes sure you are eligible everywhere you legitimately compete.
For a service-area business (a plumber, an electrician, a mobile provider), the service areas you define in your profile shape where Google will even consider showing you. Set them honestly and specifically and you are in contention across your real footprint. Leave them vague, or inflate them wildly, and you either miss areas you serve or dilute your relevance in the ones you do.
Category and address accuracy do similar quiet work. A precise primary category makes you eligible for the searches you should win; a consistent name, address, and phone number across the web removes the doubt that suppresses rankings. None of this shortens the physical distance to a searcher, but it removes the self-inflicted reasons Google might discount a business that geography already favors.
So the honest framing is: proximity is fixed, but eligibility is not. You cannot buy your way closer[1], and any vendor promising to make you rank everywhere is either targeting terms nobody searches or bending a rule you will pay for. What you can do is make certain that everywhere proximity works in your favor, relevance and prominence are working there too.
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LAST UPDATED July 10, 2026 · WRITTEN BY JAMIE KLONCZ, FOUNDER · SEO ELITE AGENCY, NAPLES FL
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