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Keyword Search Volume: What It Is & How to Find It

Keyword Search Volume: What It Is & How to Find It

Rachel Handley

Jul 25, 20245 min read
Contributors: Carlos Silva and Simon Fogg
Keyword Search Volume
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

What Is Keyword Search Volume?

Keyword search volume is the average number of monthly searches for a particular search term in a particular location. And typically refers to searches in Google.

For example, Semrush’s Keyword Overview tool shows that “dog food” has a Google search volume of 135K in the U.S.:

Keyword Overview keyword search volume highlighted

This means there are an estimated 135,000 Google searches for “dog food” in the U.S. in a typical month.

Why Are Search Volumes Important?

Search volumes indicate the level of interest in a keyword. And how much traffic your search results could generate.

That means they can help you choose the best keywords for:

That said, high-volume keywords aren’t always relevant to your business. And they tend to attract strong competition from other websites.

So, it’s important to consider search volumes alongside other keyword metrics. (More on this later.)

How to Find Keyword Search Volumes

One of the best ways to find Google search volumes is with Semrush’s Keyword Magic Tool.

Enter a term to base your search around, choose your target country, and click “Search.”

search for "dog food" in Keyword Magic Tool

The tool will present a list of “Broad Match” keywords that contain your starting keyword or a close variation.

And display their monthly search volumes in the “Volume” column.

Keyword and search volume highlighted

To check if a keyword is relevant, click the icon in the “SF” column. 

This lets you look at the Google results page in your chosen location (as of the date shown in the column to the right). So you can see what kinds of results perform well.

View results page icon highlighted and keyword data updated "Now"

Take a look at the other metrics provided in Keyword Magic Tool, too.

If you’re doing keyword research for SEO, enter your domain into the purple box. Then, look at the Personal Keyword Difficulty (PKD %) column.

This tells you how hard it’ll be for your specific domain to rank in Google’s top 10 organic results. 

Domain field highlighted with resulting personal difficulty score column

And you may want to compare it to the general keyword difficulty (KD %) metric. Because when your Personal Keyword Difficulty score is the lower of the two numbers, it indicates the term is especially relevant to your website.

If you’re doing keyword research for PPC, pay attention to the “CPC (USD)” column. Which shows the average cost per click advertisers pay for each keyword.

And the Competitive Density (Com.) column, which lets you know the level of competition between advertisers. On a scale from 0.00 (least competitive) to 1.00 (most competitive).

CPC and competitive density columns highlighted

How to Find Local Keyword Search Volumes

With the Keyword Overview tool, you can find local search volumes—i.e., search volumes in particular regions or cities. 

This helps you understand your potential reach in target areas. And better understand your localized audiences.

To get started, enter a keyword into the search bar.

Then, choose your target country and sub-location. And click “Search.”

search for "restaurants near me" and "new york" in the location drop-down

The tool will display the local and national search volumes:

local search volume for keyword shows 368K while US national volume shows 11.1M

You can also get other useful metrics for local keyword research.

And analyze the results page for your chosen search location.

SERP Analysis for local searches shows Open Table, Yelp, and Ubereats taking the top three positions

What Is a Good Search Volume for a Keyword?

What makes a good search volume depends on the keyword’s competitiveness, cost, and potential business value. 

For example, 100 monthly searches might be good for a low-competition, low-cost, and high-value keyword. Because the volume is likely to translate into worthwhile traffic and conversions.

But 100 monthly searches probably isn’t good for a high-competition, high-cost, and low-value keyword. Because the volume is unlikely to translate into worthwhile traffic and conversions.

You can evaluate these factors together in the Keyword Magic Tool.

If you’re researching keywords for SEO:

  • Look at the search volume in the “Volume” column
  • Evaluate competition levels with the Personal Keyword Difficulty score 
  • Analyze the results page to determine the potential costs of creating top-ranking content
  • Analyze search intent (what the searcher wants to achieve) by looking at the “Intent” column and reviewing the search results page. To understand the keyword’s potential business value (i.e., how likely it is to drive conversions and how valuable these conversions could be).
Search volume, intent, personal keyword difficulty score, and view results page highlighted

If you’re researching keywords for PPC:

  • Look at the search volume in the “Volume” column
  • Measure competition with the Competitive Density metric
  • Evaluate potential costs with the average CPC metric
  • Analyze search intent (what the searcher wants to achieve) by looking at the “Intent” column and reviewing the search results page. To understand the keyword’s potential business value (i.e., how likely it is to drive conversions and how valuable these conversions could be).
Search volume, intent, cpc, competitive density, and view results page highlighted

Many factors influence actual monthly search volumes, including:

  • Seasonality: Some searches are tied to seasonal events (e.g., Christmas)
  • Trends: Current events and trending topics can cause spikes in searches
  • Marketing campaigns: Effective marketing can drive more online searches
  • User behavior: Shifts in user habits (e.g., the rise of mobile search)
  • Market factors: Competitor activities, economic indicators, etc.

In Semrush, the “Trend” graph shows how actual search volumes have fluctuated over the past 12 months. 

keyword search volume and trend graph highlighted

If you need more context, search your keyword in Google Trends

You can see how search interest has changed since 2004.

Keyword search volume spikes every winter

Look out for the following kinds of keywords:

  • Evergreen keywords: Terms that get consistent interest across the year. These tend to be good candidates for SEO and long-term ad campaigns.
  • Seasonal keywords: Terms that get more interest at specific times of year. For the best results, you must plan your SEO and PPC efforts accordingly.
  • Fad keywords: Terms that experience a sudden and short-term spike in interest. These may be appropriate for advertising but aren’t good for SEO.
  • Declining keywords: Terms that are getting gradually less popular. These may prove less beneficial for your business than current search volumes suggest.
  • Rising keywords: Terms that are getting gradually more popular. These may prove more valuable for your business than current search volumes suggest. 

Monitor Your Keyword Rankings

Whatever keywords you decide to target, track your rankings. To monitor your performance.

Semrush's Position Tracking tool lets you monitor your organic and paid rankings for target keywords in target location(s). 

So you can see what's working and what isn't. And act accordingly.

keyword, search volume, and serp position over time columns highlighted
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Rachel has been a digital marketer for over 12 years. Having worked both in-house and agency-side, she has a wide range of experiences to draw on in her writing. She specializes in creating beginner-friendly articles on topics including keyword research, on-page SEO, and content creation.
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