You asked three agencies for a quote. One sent a voice note saying they’ll handle everything for ₦150k/month. Another has a proper proposal — $2,500/month. A third won’t even schedule a call unless the budget is $8,000+.
Same service name. “SEO.” Wildly different numbers.
If you’re running a Nigerian business — whether it’s a fintech, an e-commerce brand, a logistics company, or a professional services firm — and you’re trying to figure out what you’re actually paying for, this article is for you.
First, Let’s Address the Nigerian Context Directly
The SEO agency market in Nigeria has a particular problem: the bar for calling yourself an “SEO expert” is almost zero. Anyone who can run a Semrush audit and knows what a meta title is can set up an agency page, join a few WhatsApp business groups, and start quoting clients.
This doesn’t mean cheap Nigerian agencies are all bad — but it does mean you need to know exactly what separates someone who genuinely knows what they’re doing from someone who’s learned just enough to sound credible.
And for Nigerian businesses trying to compete in Google search — whether locally or internationally — the difference between real SEO and performative SEO is the difference between a channel that generates leads and one that just generates reports.
What a Low-Cost SEO Package (Under $1,000 or ₦1.5M/month) Usually Looks Like
The business model
Low-cost agencies survive by taking on many clients at once. Your account is one of 40 or 80 others being managed by the same person, usually with the same playbook applied to everyone. There’s no capacity for deep thinking about your specific market.
What you’re typically getting
- An automated audit PDF — generated by a tool, not interpreted by a strategist
- Keyword research — a spreadsheet of search volumes with no real intent analysis or competitive mapping
- Meta tag rewrites — titles and descriptions updated across your main pages
- Monthly ranking reports — showing you whether you went up or down, with no explanation of why
- Link building — this is where the real risk sits; at this budget, “link building” often means blog comment spam, irrelevant directory listings, or buying links from sites Google has already devalued
The honest reality
At this price point in the Nigerian market, you are largely paying for someone to look busy on your account. Rankings may shift slightly in the short term. But if you’re in any competitive industry — fintech, healthcare, real estate, legal services, education — this level of effort will not move the needle.
Worse, bad link building can actively hurt a site that was otherwise on a good trajectory.
What a Mid-to-High Retainer ($3,000–$12,000/month) Actually Delivers

This is where SEO becomes a real business investment rather than a monthly cost that’s hard to justify.
The business model
Quality agencies at this price point have fewer clients per strategist. They can afford to actually understand your business, your competitors, and the search landscape you’re operating in. The good ones will tell you if SEO isn’t the right priority for you right now — because they don’t need to sign every client to stay afloat.
What’s actually included
Research and strategy:
- Proper competitor analysis — who is outranking you, why, and what it would take to beat them
- Keyword mapping tied to your actual funnel, not just high-volume terms
- Search demand modeling — estimating what ranking for your target terms would actually mean in traffic and revenue before the work begins
Technical SEO:
- A prioritized technical audit with fixes that your developers can actually implement
- Core Web Vitals work — important because slow sites are actively penalized by Google, and many Nigerian business websites are slow
- Crawl analysis to understand how Google is indexing your content
- Handling JavaScript rendering issues for modern React/Next.js sites
Content:
- Topic cluster architecture — building authority in your space systematically rather than publishing random blog posts
- Content written with proper editorial standards, not churned out at volume
- Auditing and improving what you already have (often more valuable than creating new content)
Links and authority:
- Genuine editorial link acquisition — getting your brand mentioned and linked from sites with real authority
- Digital PR to earn links through original data, research, or industry commentary
- No schemes, no grey-hat tactics that work for six months and then trigger a Google penalty
Reporting:
- Monthly strategy calls, not just PDF drops
- Revenue-attributed reporting that connects organic traffic to actual business outcomes
- Forecasting vs. actuals review so you understand what’s working and why
The 5 Things That Actually Justify a Higher Price
1. Who is literally doing the work on your account
This is the single biggest variable. Ask any agency: who will be working on my account every week? A cheap agency will say “our team.” A quality agency will name a senior person with a track record you can verify.
Senior SEO practitioners are expensive because experience is expensive. A two-hour session with someone who has seen 200 competitive landscapes is worth more than a 30-page automated report.
2. Custom strategy vs. a recycled playbook
The ₦150k/month agency is applying the same strategy to your fashion e-commerce brand, a Lagos law firm, and an Abuja real estate developer. The only difference is the logo on the monthly report.
A proper agency builds strategy from your competitive reality — your domain’s current authority, who specifically is ranking above you, what content gaps exist, and what your realistic path to page one looks like.
3. Content quality
Content is one of the most misunderstood parts of SEO. More blog posts is not better SEO. Google is increasingly good at distinguishing between content that genuinely serves the reader and content that’s just trying to game rankings.
A cheap retainer might include four 600-word blog posts per month written by a generalist writer. A quality retainer might include one deeply researched piece per month — something that earns links, ranks for dozens of related queries, and actually helps your potential customers make decisions.
4. Link acquisition approach
This is where Nigerian businesses are most often burned. The phrase “we’ll build you 50 backlinks this month” should be a red flag, not a selling point. Fifty low-quality links are worse than five good ones.
Real link building — getting your brand featured in industry publications, earning citations from authoritative local and international sites, building the kind of backlink profile that survives Google algorithm updates — is slow and expensive because it involves genuine relationship-building and editorial judgment.
5. How they communicate with you
A low-cost agency sends you a monthly report. A quality agency explains what happened last month, why it happened, what they’re doing about it, and what you should expect next month. That communication loop is not a luxury — it’s how you know your investment is actually being managed.
Red Flags That Apply Specifically in the Nigerian Market

Beyond the universal warning signs, here are patterns that come up specifically when Nigerian businesses are evaluating agencies:
“We’ll get you to page one in 30 days” No one can guarantee this, and anyone promising it either doesn’t understand how Google works or is planning to use tactics that will eventually get your site penalized.
Emphasis on social media metrics instead of search metrics Some local agencies pivot to follower counts and engagement rates when asked about SEO results. Those are different channels. Make sure whoever you hire can speak specifically about organic search traffic, keyword rankings, and how those connect to revenue.
No transparency about link building Ask exactly how they plan to build links to your site. If the answer is vague (“we have relationships with websites”), ask for examples of recent placements. Real link builders can show you real links.
Charging in naira but using dollar-priced tools without strategy Some agencies price low to win the client, then deliver reports from tools they barely know how to interpret. Cheap tools aren’t the problem — shallow strategy is.
Ghost month disappearances If your agency goes quiet for two weeks with no explanation, that’s a structural problem with their capacity.
When Lower-Budget SEO Makes Sense for a Nigerian Business
Not every business needs a premium retainer. Here are cases where a lighter investment is genuinely appropriate:
- You’re a local service business with low competition — a dentist in a mid-sized city, a boutique hotel in a less competitive market. A well-optimized Google Business Profile and some local citations may get you meaningful results at low cost.
- You’re still finding product-market fit — SEO compounds over time. If you don’t yet know exactly what you’re selling or to whom, wait before investing seriously in organic search.
- You have internal capacity — if you have a content team and developers who understand web, you may need strategic SEO consulting (a few calls per month with a senior practitioner) more than full-service execution.
- You need a starting audit — a one-time technical audit and roadmap can be an efficient way to understand where you stand before committing to a monthly retainer.
Questions to Ask Before Signing Any SEO Contract
Whether you’re evaluating a local Lagos agency or an international firm, get clear answers to these:
- Who specifically will work on my account? Ask for a name and ask to speak to them on the call.
- Can you show me a redacted strategy document from a similar client?
- How do you build links, and can you show me three recent editorial placements?
- What does your reporting include, and how do you connect SEO to revenue?
- What are realistic outcomes in 6 months for a business in my industry and at my current domain authority?
- What do you need from my team to be successful? A good agency will ask you this question too.
What Rankova Does Differently
Rankova works with growth-stage businesses — including Nigerian companies looking to compete regionally and globally through search.
We don’t do volume. We don’t do templated strategies or link schemes. Every engagement starts with a named senior strategist who has been briefed on your business, your competitors, and the specific search landscape you’re operating in.
We’re direct with clients who aren’t ready for serious SEO investment — and when a business is ready, we build the kind of search presence that compounds over time and holds up through algorithm changes.
If you’re trying to figure out what level of SEO investment makes sense for your business right now — and what realistic results look like for your specific market — we’ll have that conversation with you before you sign anything.
Book a no-commitment strategy call with Rankova →
The Bottom Line
The price gap between cheap and quality SEO is real, and it reflects genuine differences in who is doing the work, how they’re doing it, and what the long-term impact is on your business.
For Nigerian businesses trying to compete in search — whether you’re targeting Lagos, the whole country, or international markets — the question isn’t which agency is cheapest. It’s which agency can actually show you what they’ll do, why it works, and what it means for your business.
Ask harder questions. Look past the proposals. You’ll identify the right partner quickly.
Questions about SEO pricing or whether your current agency is delivering? Reach out directly or leave a comment below.
