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free-websites
By city

Free websites for small businesses across the US.

We build SEO websites for US small businesses in every major metro - coast to coast, 65 cities and counting. Each city page is built around the local search market, the dominant industries, and the SERP density specific to that metro.

South

Cities in the South

Houston

Houston is the most diverse major US city by population, sprawling across hundreds of square miles. The trade and professional services markets are deep, with strong demand from a growing homeowner base.

See Houston websites

San Antonio

San Antonio is steadily growing with a strong local-services economy. Trades, hospitality, and real estate are all active.

See San Antonio websites

Fort Worth

Fort Worth has the cultural distinctness from Dallas (it's a separate city, not just 'DFW') and a small-business economy that's deep across trades, professional services, and hospitality. Population growth from 750k to over 950k in a decade has driven steady demand for new local service providers.

See Fort Worth websites

Dallas

Dallas has strong professional services, real estate, and trades. The DFW metroplex (Dallas + Fort Worth + suburbs) means location targeting matters more here than in most cities.

See Dallas websites

Austin

Austin is one of the fastest-growing US cities. Tech migration has driven rapid expansion in trades, real estate, restaurants, and professional services.

See Austin websites

Jacksonville

Jacksonville is Florida's largest city by area. The trades market is deep, the real-estate market is active from year-round migration, and small business density is growing.

See Jacksonville websites

Charlotte

Charlotte is one of the South's fastest-growing cities. Banking, trades, real estate, and small business density are all expanding.

See Charlotte websites

Washington

DC's small-business mix leans heavy on professional services, with strong demand from a transient federal-and-contractor population that moves often. Trades cluster around the row-house renovation market.

See Washington websites

Nashville

Nashville is one of the South's hottest growth cities. Music industry money plus a steady inflow of new residents has supercharged demand for trades, real estate, hospitality, and creative services.

See Nashville websites

Memphis

Memphis has a deep local-services economy with strong music, food, and logistics roots. The neighborhood structure (Midtown, Cooper-Young, East Memphis, Germantown) drives most search behavior.

See Memphis websites

Louisville

Louisville's small-business economy spans bourbon-tourism hospitality, healthcare-adjacent professional services, and a steady trades market driven by older housing stock that needs constant maintenance.

See Louisville websites

Baltimore

Baltimore's row-house housing stock keeps trades and contractors busy year-round. Federal Hill, Canton, Hampden, and Mount Vernon each anchor distinct commercial corridors.

See Baltimore websites

Atlanta

Atlanta is a corporate-HQ anchor city for the South, with a deep small-business economy and strong neighborhood identity (Buckhead, Midtown, Inman Park, Decatur, Marietta). Population growth has been continuous for two decades.

See Atlanta websites

Raleigh

Raleigh anchors the Research Triangle alongside Durham and Chapel Hill, with a tech-and-pharma-driven population that searches heavily for service providers. Cary, Apex, and Wake Forest are major suburb markets.

See Raleigh websites

Miami

Miami's small-business economy is bilingual, real-estate-heavy, and tourism-fueled. Brickell, Coral Gables, Coconut Grove, and the Beaches each operate as distinct micro-markets with their own search behavior.

See Miami websites

Tampa

Tampa has been one of the fastest-growing US metros, drawing retirees and remote workers from the Northeast and Midwest. The metro spans Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater with distinct search behavior in each.

See Tampa websites

Orlando

Orlando combines tourism (Disney, Universal) with a fast-growing resident economy in Winter Park, Lake Nona, and the broader I-4 corridor. Population growth has been continuous for years.

See Orlando websites

Plano

Plano is one of the wealthiest, most tech-driven suburbs in the DFW metroplex. Corporate HQs (Toyota, Liberty Mutual, JPMorgan) drive a high-income homeowner base with strong demand for premium trades and professional services.

See Plano websites

Durham

Durham combines Duke University, a fast-growing tech and biotech sector, and a revitalized downtown. The neighborhood mix from Trinity Park to Hope Valley drives diverse search behavior.

See Durham websites

Birmingham

Birmingham has a stable healthcare-anchored economy with strong demand for trades from older housing stock across Highland Park, Mountain Brook, Homewood, and Vestavia Hills.

See Birmingham websites

Richmond

Richmond has a stable government-and-finance economy with growing tech and creative sectors. The Fan, Church Hill, Carytown, and the West End each drive distinct commercial activity.

See Richmond websites

Lexington

Lexington has a stable horse-country and university-anchored economy with strong homeowner demand across Chevy Chase, Beaumont, and the surrounding county. Trades and home-services run steady.

See Lexington websites

New Orleans

New Orleans has a unique small-business economy shaped by hospitality, culture, tourism, and a homeowner base maintaining historic housing stock. The Garden District, Uptown, Marigny, and Mid-City each have distinct search behavior.

See New Orleans websites

Norfolk

Norfolk anchors the Hampton Roads region (Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Newport News) with a substantial military presence and a transient population that searches heavily for service providers.

See Norfolk websites

Baton Rouge

Baton Rouge anchors a stable government-and-petrochemical economy with steady homeowner demand and a substantial LSU-driven student-and-young-professional population.

See Baton Rouge websites

Frisco

Frisco has been one of the fastest-growing US cities, driven by corporate relocations (PGA, Cowboys HQ, fintech and tech firms) and a wave of new master-planned communities. The customer base is high-income and research-driven.

See Frisco websites

Winston-Salem

Winston-Salem has a stable, diverse economy spanning healthcare, banking, and manufacturing, with strong homeowner demand across Buena Vista, Ardmore, and the broader Forsyth County area.

See Winston-Salem websites

Irving

Irving anchors the western half of the DFW metroplex and hosts a substantial corporate-HQ presence (ExxonMobil, Kimberly-Clark, McKesson) plus the Las Colinas business district. The customer base is corporate-relocation-heavy and research-driven.

See Irving websites
Midwest

Cities in the Midwest

Chicago

Chicago is one of the deepest mid-American small-business markets. Trades, restaurants, professional services, and real estate are all dense and active across 77 community areas.

See Chicago websites

Columbus

Columbus is one of the fastest-growing Midwestern cities. Strong trades, professional services, and a dense Ohio State University-adjacent local economy.

See Columbus websites

Indianapolis

Indianapolis has a deep local economy: trades, professional services, real estate, manufacturing-adjacent service providers. Competition is lower than coastal majors.

See Indianapolis websites

Detroit

Detroit has a revitalization story across downtown, Corktown, and Midtown, with steady demand from a stabilizing homeowner base in surrounding neighborhoods. Trades dominate the local-services search behavior.

See Detroit websites

Milwaukee

Milwaukee has a stable, blue-collar economy with strong demand for trades and home services from a homeowner base that maintains older properties. The lakefront, Bay View, and Wauwatosa each have their own search patterns.

See Milwaukee websites

Kansas City

Kansas City spans two states (Missouri and Kansas) with a homeowner-heavy economy and strong demand for trades and home-services across both sides of the line. The Plaza, Westport, and Overland Park each have distinct commercial bases.

See Kansas City websites

Omaha

Omaha has a steady, recession-resistant economy anchored by insurance, banking, and a substantial homeowner base. Trades and home-services run hot year-round given the climate.

See Omaha websites

Minneapolis

Minneapolis has a stable, well-educated population that researches thoroughly before they hire. Trades, home-services, and professional services all see steady demand, with strong cross-river search activity to Saint Paul.

See Minneapolis websites

Cleveland

Cleveland has a stable homeowner base across older neighborhoods (Tremont, Ohio City, Lakewood) and east-side suburbs, with trades and home-services driven by aging housing stock and climate demands.

See Cleveland websites

St. Louis

St. Louis spans Missouri and Illinois with a stable homeowner economy and strong demand for trades from older housing stock. Central West End, the Hill, and Clayton each anchor distinct commercial activity.

See St. Louis websites

Cincinnati

Cincinnati has a stable corporate-and-homeowner economy anchored by Procter & Gamble and a deep small-business base. Over-the-Rhine, Hyde Park, and the Northern Kentucky suburbs all drive distinct search activity.

See Cincinnati websites

Saint Paul

Saint Paul is the quieter half of the Twin Cities, with a stable homeowner base across Highland Park, Macalester-Groveland, and the East Side. Trades and home-services see steady demand.

See Saint Paul websites

Madison

Madison has a stable economy anchored by the state government and the University of Wisconsin, plus a growing tech sector. The isthmus-and-lakes geography drives distinct neighborhood search patterns.

See Madison websites
West

Cities in the West

Los Angeles

LA's small-business density is extraordinary across hospitality, trades, professional services, lifestyle. Each neighborhood has its own micro-economy.

See Los Angeles websites

Phoenix

Phoenix is one of the fastest-growing US metros. Population growth means new homeowners, new businesses, and constantly changing search behavior. Trades and HVAC are particularly active.

See Phoenix websites

San Diego

San Diego combines a stable resident base with strong tourism, military, and tech. Trades, restaurants, and lifestyle services are all dense.

See San Diego websites

Seattle

Seattle's small-business economy runs on tech-adjacent professional services, weather-driven trades (roofing, drainage, mold remediation), and a dense neighborhood network from Ballard to West Seattle. Customers research thoroughly before they call.

See Seattle websites

Denver

Denver has been one of the fastest-growing US metros for a decade. New residents arrive needing every category of service provider, and the front-range geography means search behavior splits across Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, and Boulder.

See Denver websites

Portland

Portland's small-business economy leans creative, sustainable, and neighborhood-loyal. Each quadrant (NE, NW, SE, SW) has its own commercial corridor and search behavior.

See Portland websites

Las Vegas

Las Vegas is two markets in one: the tourism economy on the Strip, and the resident economy in Henderson, Summerlin, and the suburbs. Hospitality, beauty, photography, and trades all run hot year-round thanks to constant population churn.

See Las Vegas websites

Tucson

Tucson has a steady retiree-and-snowbird population mixed with a university-driven young-professional base. Trades and HVAC dominate search demand year-round given the desert climate.

See Tucson websites

Fresno

Fresno anchors California's Central Valley, with a strong agricultural and logistics base supporting steady trades, HVAC, and real-estate demand. Cost of living is far lower than coastal California, which means more local owner-operator businesses.

See Fresno websites

Sacramento

Sacramento has grown steadily as a state-capital plus tech-overflow market. Midtown, East Sacramento, and the Roseville/Folsom suburbs each drive distinct search behavior.

See Sacramento websites

Colorado Springs

Colorado Springs combines a stable military-base population with steady retirement and tourism inflows. Trades and home-services dominate search demand given the older housing stock and altitude-driven HVAC needs.

See Colorado Springs websites

Boise

Boise has been one of the fastest-growing US small metros for years, drawing migrants from California and the Pacific Northwest. New housing developments in Meridian, Eagle, and Nampa drive constant demand for trades and home-services.

See Boise websites

Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City has a fast-growing tech sector (Silicon Slopes), a stable family-oriented homeowner base, and steady ski-and-outdoor tourism. The Wasatch Front spans Salt Lake, Sandy, Provo, and Park City.

See Salt Lake City websites

Anaheim

Anaheim combines Disney-driven tourism with a steady Orange County resident economy. Trades and home-services see consistent demand from the dense suburban housing stock across the broader OC.

See Anaheim websites

Reno

Reno has been one of the fastest-growing small-metro markets thanks to California migration and Tesla-Gigafactory-driven economic expansion. New housing in Sparks and South Reno drives steady trades demand.

See Reno websites

Spokane

Spokane has a stable homeowner economy serving as the regional hub for eastern Washington and northern Idaho. Trades and home-services see steady year-round demand thanks to climate and aging housing stock.

See Spokane websites

Scottsdale

Scottsdale has a high-income, design-conscious resident base with strong demand for premium trades, pool services, and lifestyle providers. North Scottsdale, Old Town, and the Airpark each operate as distinct micro-markets.

See Scottsdale websites

Chandler

Chandler is a fast-growing tech-and-family suburb of Phoenix anchored by Intel and a wave of corporate relocations. Master-planned communities drive steady demand for trades and home-services.

See Chandler websites

Mesa

Mesa is one of the largest US suburbs by population, with a homeowner-heavy economy spanning retirees, families, and a growing young-professional base. Trades and HVAC dominate search demand year-round.

See Mesa websites

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