Where to Get Citations

Where to get local business citations

This page was updated in May 2022

There are many types of Citations that require monitoring and maintenance across search engines, local business directories, and apps. So where do you need to create and maintain local business citations across the web? It should be a straightforward question, however the landscape is constantly changing. With new directories emerging, and major data platforms merging, altering or rebranding - it certainly makes keeping guidelines on this topic up-to-date almost as challenging as maintaining accurate citations themselves.

This guide will cover the main purpose of citations, a list of the main places local business information is gathered and distributed across the web, organized by citation type and information on how to start building citations to benefit your businesses online visibility.

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The Main Purpose of Citations

Your ultimate, unifying goal when building citations is to make sure that both consumers and search engines are being properly informed about your business information anywhere it’s published on the web. Search engines, local business directories, and apps offer a specific structure for building out listings. There’s a core set of quality platforms on which nearly any type of local business can get listed.

Citations serve a dual purpose:

  1. To be visible on the platforms that your consumer base uses so that they can find accurate information about your company and connect with it

  2. To ensure that search engines like Google find a broad and accurate representation of your business around the web on quality platforms, increasing your chances of ranking well in the local SERPs for important terms

Where to Create & Maintain Citations

Any local business you market has to have the table stakes of accurate structured citations on major platforms like Facebook, Yelp, Infogroup, Acxiom, and YP.

Citations require monitoring on search engines, local business directories, apps and more. Below are the places you need to check and monitor your local citations to ensure your business information is accurate and consistent.

Search Engines

Search engines are fed information from numerous sources, including primary data aggregators. Business information is then delivered via search results. The key players are:

  • Google

  • Bing

  • Apple

Google is such a fundamental local business asset that many local SEO experts don’t term it a “citation.” That being said, your Google Business Profile listing (formerly Google My Business) is the most important listing to develop and manage well. Google’s domination of local search makes your listing there incredibly valuable. As important as your google business listing is, you’re not done there, Bing and Apple are also important platforms in this sphere.

Primary Data Aggregators

Large databases known as “primary data aggregators” make the information they have available to online directories and search engines. Aggregators list, distribute and share information about local businesses. They are a key part of the local search ecosystem.

In the US, primary data aggregators include:

  • Foursquare

  • Data Axle (formerly Infogroup)

  • Neustar Localeze

Major Directories and Important Platforms

Local business owners and marketers can create citations on a variety of important local business data platforms that exist to publish this type of data.

YelpFacebookInstagram
YPSuperpagesDexKnows
BrownBookJudy’s BookWaze
UberNextdoorezLocal
CitySquaresCylexHotfrog
USInfoShowMe LocalTomTom
HereOpendiYalwa
iGlobalMantasTupalo
US CityN49Pages24
Find OpenWheretoNavmi


At the very least, each local business needs to create and manage an accurate listing on all of the above platforms, ensuring that they don’t have duplicate or inaccurate listings.

There are several options for dealing with your core citations. You can build and manage them manually, keeping track of their ongoing status in a spreadsheet. You could also pay a third party to do this for you. Finally, you can opt for the convenience of an automated citation management service like Moz Local, which not only builds citations but also alerts you to any changes made to them and tracks your progress over time.

Some core citations are free, while others are either paid or offer both free and paid listings.

Geo- and Industry-specific Platforms

Depending on your industry and the physical location of your business, additional platforms may offer opportunities for building more high-value structured citations.

For example, hotels and other hospitality industry enterprises can get listed on the very popular travel review website, TripAdvisor.com. Doctors can get listed on a site like HealthGrades.com. Attorneys can get listed at FindLaw.com. General contractors, home service providers, and many other business models will be able to seek out professional/trade association sites on which to build additional citations.

Chamber of commerce websites, local business associations, and community hubs also offer places to get listed which are specific to the geography you serve.

Some of these citations will be free, while others may require payment. A good rule of thumb is to only pay for a listing on a geo/industry platform if it will send enough traffic or transactions your way to justify the expense.

Unstructured Citations

An unstructured citation occurs on any website or app that isn’t specifically structured for the publication of local business listings. For example, mentions in a news article, a blog post, or on a social media platform act as a reference to your business, just like a structured citation.

In the world of local citation building, the best unstructured citations include a link and are called linktations. Even if a citation does not include a link they can still be a valuable mention of your business online.

You can either intentionally develop unstructured citations for your business, which often requires a strategy for growing citations, or simply earn them based on merit and public interest/sharing of information.

You can intentionally build unstructured citations by submitting editorials or other material to local newspapers, getting featured on blogs, sponsoring groups or events, or engaging in social media campaigns. Additionally, you can earn voluntary mentions of your business by publishing exceptional content, being newsworthy, or by simply being popular.

Once a local business has built its Google Business Profile listing, its core citations, and its geo/industry-specific citations, it’s rarely worth it to continue building an endless supply of citations on low-quality directories. Instead, focus on earning new unstructured citations from noteworthy websites and apps, as they can introduce your brand to new audiences and bring new traffic and transactions to your business. In competitive markets, valuable unstructured citations (like a mention in a major online news piece) can be competitive difference-makers.

Owned Properties

Don’t forget your website. We’re mentioning it last, but your website is the most authoritative representation of your business data on the Internet. Be sure that your name, address, and phone number are formatted and spelled consistently any place they appear on your site. Don’t overlook your header and footer, or references deep within pages of your site. If any part of your business data changes, audit your entire website to correct all references.

Structured vs Unstructured Citations

Listings on formal directories such as data platforms and major directories listed above are called “structured citations.” When other types of platforms (like online news, blogs, best-of lists, etc.) reference a local business’ complete or partial contact information, that’s called an “unstructured citation.”

Examples of structured citations include Yelp, Superpages, Facebook and so on.

Examples of unstructured citations might include community organizations like Chamber of Commerce websites, the local YMCA. Press release sites like PRweb.com and PRnewsire.com. News sites with local media coverage (or just media coverage in general — it’s not always local.) Blogs, hobby sites, DIY sites. Trade organizations, many local businesses are affiliated with some type of governing/regulating body, trade organization, award organization, and many more.

Start Building Structured Local Citations

Before starting to build and maintain local citations it's helpful to see which citations your business already owns, and how accurate they are. Fortunately, we've built a free tool at Moz that can check all the important citations and data aggregators for your business listings. If you find any that are missing or inaccurate, you can start with these.

Check your local citations and business listings:

And if you're ready to start building and maintaining your citations, with a paid plan Moz Local helps you easily create and manage your local business listings on Google, Facebook, and other sites to help consumers find and choose your business.

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