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How to Set Up Google Business Profile for Estate Planning Attorneys (Step-by-Step)

Google Business Profile is the single fastest way to get your estate planning firm in front of local clients, and most attorneys set it up wrong. This guide shows you how to do it right.

Estate planning attorney working at a modern desk with a laptop showing Google search results

Google Business Profile is the single highest-leverage local marketing asset for an estate planning attorney in 2026 — completing it correctly typically drives more inquiries in 90 days than a fresh website does in a year. Google's own data shows roughly 46% of searches have local intent, and BrightLocal's 2024 Local Consumer Review Survey found 76% of consumers regularly read reviews when researching local businesses. The Local Pack — the three listings above the organic results — captures the majority of clicks for "estate planning attorney near me" queries.

Key Takeaways

  • Google Business Profile is free and puts your firm in the local map pack above regular search results
  • Nearly 46% of all Google searches have local intent, and GBP is your best tool to capture that traffic
  • Your primary category should be "Estate Planning Attorney," not just "Attorney"
  • Reviews are a ranking factor: aim for a steady stream, not a one-time burst
  • Posting weekly to your GBP keeps your profile active and signals trust to Google

If someone in your city searches "estate planning attorney near me," the first thing they see isn't a website. It's the map pack. Three firms show up. Everyone else is invisible. Google Business Profile (GBP) is what gets you in those three spots, and it costs nothing to set up. Nearly 46% of all Google searches have local intent (BrightEdge, 2024), which means local visibility isn't optional for attorneys who want a steady flow of new clients.

The problem is most attorneys either haven't claimed their profile, or they set it up once and never touched it again. This guide walks you through the full setup, plus the ongoing habits that keep you ranking.

What is Google Business Profile?

Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business) is the free Google product that controls how a local business appears in Google Search and Google Maps. For an estate planning attorney, it powers the Local Pack — the three listings shown above the organic results when someone searches "estate planning attorney near me" — plus the side-panel knowledge card with hours, photos, reviews, and a click-to-call button. It is the single highest-leverage local marketing asset for a solo or small firm.

Step 1: Claim or Create Your Profile

Go to business.google.com and sign in with a Google account. Search for your firm name. If it already exists (Google sometimes auto-generates listings), click "Claim this business." If it doesn't exist, click "Add your business."

Important: use the same Google account you use for Google Search Console and Google Analytics. Keeping everything under one account makes reporting much cleaner later.

Step 2: Choose the Right Category

This is where most attorneys lose rankings. Your primary category should be "Estate Planning Attorney", not just "Attorney" or "Legal Services." Google uses this to decide which searches to show you for.

You can add secondary categories to catch additional traffic:

Don't stack unrelated categories. Adding "Personal Injury Attorney" when you don't do that work will confuse the algorithm and dilute your relevance for estate planning searches.

Step 3: Fill Out Every Field

Google rewards complete profiles. Work through each section:

Field What to Enter Why It Matters
Business name Your exact legal firm name (no keyword stuffing) Keyword stuffing in names violates Google's policy and risks suspension
Address Your physical office address Required for map pack eligibility in your city
Service area Cities/counties you serve Expands your reach beyond just your office location
Phone number Your main office line Must match your website and all online directories
Website Your homepage URL Drives traffic and signals legitimacy
Hours Accurate office hours Clients check before calling; outdated hours hurt trust
Services Wills, trusts, probate, power of attorney, etc. Google uses services to match you with specific search queries
Business description 750 characters max. Lead with your city and specialization Appears in your profile and influences relevance
Estate planning attorney's notebook with Google Business Profile category planning notes beside printed practice-area documents on a wooden desk

Step 4: Verify Your Profile

Google won't show your profile until it's verified. You'll usually get one of these options:

Don't make major edits to your profile while waiting for verification. It can restart the process.

Step 5: Add Photos

Profiles with photos get significantly more engagement than those without. Add at minimum:

Use real photos, not stock images. Google can detect stock imagery and it sends the wrong trust signal anyway.

Step 6: Get Reviews (Then Keep Getting Them)

Reviews are one of the top local ranking factors. The #1 organic Google result captures 39.8% of all clicks (Backlinko, 2024), and reviews directly influence whether you land in that top position.

The most effective way to get reviews is to simply ask. After a matter closes, send a short follow-up email or text with a direct link to your GBP review page. Make it one click. Most clients are happy to leave a review when the process is easy and they're asked personally. For a deeper playbook on volume, cadence, and response templates, see our guide to getting more client reviews for your law firm.

A few rules:

Step 7: Post Weekly

Most attorneys set up GBP and never post to it. That's a missed opportunity. Google Posts are short updates (like social media posts) that appear directly on your profile. Posting weekly keeps your profile fresh and signals to Google that your business is active.

Post ideas for estate planning attorneys:

Posts expire after 7 days, so make it a weekly habit. 15 minutes on Monday morning is enough.

What to Do After Setup

Once your profile is live and verified, two things matter most: consistency and citations. Citations are mentions of your firm's name, address, and phone number across the web, in legal directories like Avvo, FindLaw, and Justia, and in general directories like Yelp and the Better Business Bureau. The more consistent and widespread your citations, the more Google trusts your location data, and the higher you rank locally.

Make sure your name, address, and phone number (NAP) are identical everywhere. Even small differences like "St." vs "Street" can create inconsistencies that hurt your local rankings.

"Customer satisfaction is significantly influenced by reviews — 76% of consumers regularly read online reviews when researching local businesses." — BrightLocal, 2024 Local Consumer Review Survey

Per Whitespark's 2024 Local Search Ranking Factors Survey, the top three signals that move a profile up in the Local Pack are primary category, proximity to the searcher, and review velocity — not website backlinks. For most estate planning attorneys, getting category, NAP, and review cadence right outperforms a year of unfocused content effort.

GBP is one piece of a broader local strategy. If you want a tight, budget-aware checklist for everything else that moves the needle in local search, read our guides on how estate planning attorneys get found on Google and winning local SEO for probate lawyers without a huge budget. Pair-matched with paid distribution? Start with Local Services Ads, which sit above the Local Pack on most service-area queries.

Sources & References

  1. Google — Local Ranking Factors documentation
  2. BrightLocal — 2024 Local Consumer Review Survey
  3. Whitespark — 2024 Local Search Ranking Factors Survey
  4. BrightLocal — Local Search Industry Report

Frequently Asked Questions

How do estate planning attorneys set up Google Business Profile in 2026?

Sign in at business.google.com with the firm's email, search for the business name, claim or create the listing, and complete category as "Estate Planning Attorney." Verify via postcard (5–14 days), phone, email, or video. Then complete every field: address, hours, services, photos, and a 750-character description that names your practice areas and city. A complete profile can rank in the Local Pack within 2–4 weeks.

Does Google Business Profile help estate planning attorneys get more clients?

Yes. A complete, optimized Google Business Profile puts your firm in the local map pack (the three listings that appear above regular search results). Nearly 46% of all Google searches have local intent, and most people click one of those top three results. For attorneys serving a specific city or region, GBP is one of the highest-ROI things you can do.

How long does it take to verify a Google Business Profile?

Postcard verification typically takes 5–14 business days. Phone or email verification (when available) is instant. Video verification is usually reviewed within a few days. Once verified, your profile can start appearing in local search results right away.

What category should an estate planning attorney use on Google Business Profile?

Use 'Estate Planning Attorney' as your primary category. You can add secondary categories like 'Attorney,' 'Legal Services,' or 'Probate Attorney' to catch additional searches. Don't add unrelated categories because it can dilute your relevance for the terms that matter most.

How many Google reviews does an estate planning attorney need to rank locally?

There's no magic number, but 10–20 recent, positive reviews is a solid starting point in most markets. Consistency matters more than volume. A steady stream of new reviews signals to Google that your firm is active and trusted. Aim to get at least 1–2 new reviews per month.

Is Google Business Profile free?

Yes, completely free. Google Business Profile costs nothing to set up or maintain. The only costs are your time to optimize it and optionally running Google Local Services Ads through a separate paid product.

Want a website that gets your firm cited and called?

LawScale builds done-for-you websites for estate planning attorneys — owned by you, delivered in about a week, designed to rank in AI search and convert visitors into consultations.

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Brannon Hogue, founder of LawScale

Brannon Hogue

Founder, LawScale

Brannon Hogue is the founder of LawScale, a website and review-automation service for estate planning attorneys. He's an automation engineer with an electrical engineering background — not an attorney — focused on the technical and operational side of how solo and small firms get found, get hired, and follow up with clients. He writes about law firm websites, local SEO, generative engine optimization, intake systems, and the gap between marketing spend and signed clients.