You know your care home delivers exceptional care. But when a family in your area types "care home near me" into Google at 10pm on a Sunday night — the moment they finally accept that a parent needs residential support — your home is not in the results they see.
This is not a reflection of the quality of your care. It is a reflection of your digital presence. And the good news is that digital presence is entirely fixable. In this post, we will cover the five most common reasons UK care homes are invisible in Google search — and give you a specific, actionable fix for every one.
The real cost of Google invisibility for care homes
Before we get to the fixes, it is worth understanding exactly what Google invisibility costs. A 60-bed care home running at 80% occupancy has 12 empty beds. At £1,000 per week per resident — a conservative average across most of the UK — that is £12,000 per week in lost revenue. £624,000 per year. Not because your care is poor, but because the families who would fill those beds cannot find you online.
The families most likely to find you through Google are also among your most valuable potential residents: self-funders and private-pay families researching care options independently, without waiting for a social worker referral. These families move quickly once they find a home they trust. They are searching for you right now. The only question is whether they can find you.
Reason 1 — Your Google Business Profile is incomplete or unclaimed
Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is the listing that appears on Google Maps and in the information panel beside search results. It is also the primary data source Google uses when generating the Map Pack — the three local results at the very top of local care home searches, above all organic website links. Most care homes have a profile. Very few have a fully completed one — and Google treats completeness as a trust and relevance signal.
The fix — complete these steps this week:
- Log into business.google.com and claim your profile. Google verifies ownership with a PIN to your registered address — allow 1–5 business days.
- Complete every field without exception: name, address, phone, website, hours, and categories. Choose "Nursing Home", "Residential Care", or "Assisted Living Facility" as your primary category.
- Write a 750-character description that names your care types (residential, nursing, dementia, respite) and your city — include "care home in [city]" naturally.
- Upload at least 15 real photos: exterior, lounge, dining room, garden, bedrooms, and team. Photo-rich profiles generate significantly more clicks.
- List every care type as a separate service with a 2–3 sentence description.
- Activate weekly posts — a care tip, a team update, or an availability announcement.
Reason 2 — Your website is not optimised for local care home searches
Families searching for care do not search generically. They search specifically: "dementia care home in Leeds", "nursing home near Sheffield", "residential care Birmingham". A care home website that mentions "high-quality care" once on the homepage, with no pages dedicated to specific care types or locations, will almost never rank for local care searches — however well-designed it looks.
The fix:
- Create a dedicated page for each care type you offer — at least 500 words of genuine, specific content per page.
- Include your city, borough, and postcode area in page titles, H1 headings, and body content.
- Add your full address to your footer in exactly the same format as your Google Business Profile — consistency is a ranking signal.
- Ensure your website loads in under 3 seconds on mobile. Test at pagespeed.web.dev — a mobile score below 60 is actively suppressing your rankings.
Reason 3 — You have too few Google reviews, or they are too old
Google's algorithm uses review volume, star rating, and recency as local ranking signals. A care home with 8 reviews — the most recent posted 11 months ago — will rank significantly lower than a competitor with 40 recent reviews and an active response pattern, even when the lower-reviewed home delivers better care. Families also use review count and recency as credibility signals before they call.
The fix:
- Create your direct Google review link from your GBP dashboard ("Ask for reviews") and keep it accessible.
- Ask for a review within 24–48 hours of every positive family interaction — after a good tour, a comfortable settling-in, or a positive care review meeting.
- Add your review link to email signatures, family newsletters, and your website footer.
- Respond to every review — positive and negative — within 48 hours. Response rate and recency are both ranking signals.
- Target a minimum of 3–5 new reviews per month. Volume and recency together produce sustained ranking improvement.
Reason 4 — Your care directory listings are inconsistent or incomplete
Google and AI search tools cross-reference your information across multiple sources to verify legitimacy and assess authority. Your name, address, phone number, and website — NAP data — should be identical everywhere you appear. The most common inconsistencies we find: a different phone format on the website vs Google, an abbreviated address on carehome.co.uk, a missing URL on the NHS Care Finder listing. Each one reduces Google's confidence in your organisation.
The fix:
- Audit every platform where your care home appears and note discrepancies in your NAP data.
- Standardise everything to match your Google Business Profile exactly — including formatting ("Street" not "St", "+44" not "0044").
- Fully complete your carehome.co.uk and homecare.co.uk profiles with current photos and accurate details.
- Claim your NHS Care Finder listing — a high-authority citation that directly improves local rankings for care providers.
Reason 5 — Your website loads too slowly on mobile
Over 60% of families researching care homes do so on a mobile phone — often in the evening, often during an emotionally pressured moment. Google uses mobile page speed as a direct ranking factor, and slow pages lose visitors before they read a single word. The most common cause: uncompressed images. A single full-resolution lounge photo can add 4–6 seconds to your load time — and most care home websites have 15–25 of them.
The fix:
- Test your site at pagespeed.web.dev right now and note Google's prioritised recommendations.
- Compress every image with tinypng.com before uploading — typically 60–80% smaller with no visible quality loss.
- On WordPress, install a caching plugin — WP Super Cache is free and adds 15–25 points to most care home PageSpeed scores.
- Ask your host to enable GZIP compression and browser caching — often one-click settings.
- Target a mobile PageSpeed score of 70 or above.
Your 30-day visibility plan
You do not need to fix everything at once. Here is the order that produces the fastest results:
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Claim and fully complete your Google Business Profile — every field, 15+ photos, all services listed. |
| Week 2 | Fix your NAP consistency across carehome.co.uk, NHS Care Finder, and every directory you appear in. |
| Week 3 | Launch your review programme — create your review link, brief your team, and request your first reviews. |
| Week 4 | Address your website: compress images, install caching, and plan dedicated care-type and location pages. |