What Is a Good Geographic Traffic for Healthcare?
Imagine running a dental practice in Austin. Your website gets 3,000 visitors monthly. But only 1,200 are from Austin or surrounding towns. The other 1,800 are from Dallas, Houston, and beyond. These visitors will never book an appointment because they’re too far away. You’re probably spending ads to reach them. This is the geographic traffic problem every healthcare provider faces.
Why Geographic Traffic Matters for Healthcare
Healthcare is personal and local. Patients choose providers close to home. Here’s why tracking this matters:
- Appointment conversions: A visitor from across town is far more likely to book than someone three hours away. Distance directly impacts no-show rates and follow-through.
- Insurance networks: Many insurance plans restrict patients to providers within a specific radius. Local traffic means more eligible patients.
- Referral patterns: If your practice is in a suburban area but you get city traffic, your marketing might be misaligned with your actual patient base.
- Reputation management: Local patients leave reviews, refer neighbors, and become long-term patients. They build your practice.
The best healthcare websites typically see 70-85% of their traffic from their metropolitan area and surrounding communities. Anything less suggests your marketing is too broad.
How to Check in GA4
Here’s how to see your geographic data in Google Analytics 4:
- Log into GA4 and open the Reports section
- Click on User
- Select Geo
- Choose City or Country
- Review the Active users column
Look for your city and nearby towns in the top 20. If major population centers outside your service area dominate, your targeting needs adjustment.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics gives you a visual map of where patients find you. Instead of digging through GA4 reports, you see instantly which neighborhoods drive the most inquiries. This helps you make smarter decisions about where to spend your marketing budget.
You might find that your social media ads attract a national audience, but your local SEO brings in the patients who actually book. ClawAnalytics shows this difference clearly so you can double down on what works.
Common questions become easy to answer: Should I open a second location? Which parts of town aren’t seeing my content? Am I wasting money on out-of-area ads?
Quick Wins
- Target your ads by zip code: Most advertising platforms let you target within a specific radius. Restrict to 15-20 miles around your practice.
- Create service-area pages: If you serve multiple nearby cities, create dedicated pages for each. Include local landmarks and neighborhood details.
- Claim all local listings: Google Business Profile, Apple Maps, and healthcare directories. Consistent NAP (name, address, phone) data helps local patients find you.
- Track form submissions by location: Use GA4 goals to see which cities generate the most appointment requests.