GEO cost depends on the size of the website, the strength of existing content, the level of competition in the market, and how much authority needs to be built from the current baseline. A small business with a clear service focus and a well-structured site may need a lighter GEO engagement centered on content optimization, FAQ expansion, schema implementation, and entity clarity. A larger business competing in a crowded category or starting from a weak content foundation will require more comprehensive work over a longer period.

Compared to paid advertising, GEO builds value that compounds over time rather than stopping when spend stops. A page optimized for AI visibility continues earning citations and mentions after the initial work is done, whereas a paid ad delivers results only while the budget is active. This makes GEO more similar in cost structure to traditional SEO—a longer-term investment that builds durable visibility rather than renting attention.

Comparing GEO directly to traditional offline marketing is more difficult because the measurable outcomes are different. GEO drives specific, intent-based visibility at the moment a prospect is asking a relevant question, which makes it more targeted than broad-reach media like TV or print. The right cost comparison depends on what the business is currently spending to reach prospects at that same high-intent moment.