Most agencies don’t know immigration.
They pitch you the same playbook they sell to PI firms. The playbook is wrong for what you do. Your clients speak multiple languages. The regulations shift under you. The people you serve don’t trust legal advertising. And the ethics rules are stricter than what most agencies have ever read.




What you should actually do next quarter
Your Google Ads clicks cost a fraction of what PI firms pay. You can run a real campaign at $2,000 to $3,000 a month and get enough data to optimize. The question is not whether to spend; it is whether your intake can handle the volume that cheap clicks bring in.
If you serve Spanish speaking clients and your site is English with a flag icon, you are invisible to half your market. The fix is not a translation plugin. It is dedicated /es/ pages, hreflang tags, and a native speaker who knows the law. This is the single highest ROI investment in your practice.
Stop marketing all six visa types at once. Pick the one where your competition is thinnest and your retainers are largest. For most firms that is either mandamus litigation or Crim-Imm referrals, and either one can fund the rest of the practice on its own.
Your Google Ads cost a fraction of what a PI firm pays
You may have assumed your CPC numbers were similar to other practice areas. They are not. Here is the spread that changes your entire strategy.
The gap is bigger than you think
The catch: your intake has to handle the volume
Cheap clicks work against you if your phone goes to voicemail at 5 PM. Your clients call after work because they cannot make calls during work hours. The waste is not the click cost. The waste is the conversion you never had a chance at.
- 9 to 5 phone coverage only
- 12 field contact form on mobile
- English only after hours service
- 48 hour callback policy
- 24/7 bilingual answering
- One tap call button above the fold
- Three field intake: name, language, phone
- Same day callback Monday to Saturday
Local Service Ads matter more for you than for any other practice area. The Google Verified badge means more to a client who has been warned about notario fraud than any tagline you write. The LSA playbook covers the verification side.
An HR director and a separated spouse are not the same client
Read your firm’s homepage out loud. Then ask which of these four people it actually speaks to. If the answer is “all of them, sort of,” that is your conversion problem.
The corporate sponsor
HR director, founder, or in house counsel. Cares about PERM timelines and DOL audits. Pays $8K to $30K per H-1B file.
Reaches them: LinkedIn posts on visa bulletin changes, technical CLE webinars, direct outreach to in house counsel. Not “We Fight For Your Family.”
The family petitioner
US citizen or LPR sponsoring a spouse, parent, or child. Years of waiting. Looking for someone who understands separation, not legal strategy.
Reaches them: Facebook and Instagram stories of reunited families in both languages. A homepage that opens with “we help you get to your family.”
The distressed applicant
In removal proceedings or detention. Often family calling from outside. Hours to act, not days. Scared, on a cell phone, at night.
Reaches them: LSA above organic results, mobile site that loads instantly, one tap call button, 24/7 bilingual triage within 15 minutes.
The investor visa candidate
EB-5, E-2, O-1 applicants. Often based abroad. Comparing your firm to three others globally. Pays $20K to $50K+ in fees.
Reaches them: Seminars in source countries with wealth manager partnerships, technical business immigration content, site that reads like a private bank.
You probably have four businesses inside one firm. The marketing has to act like it. Send each ad campaign to a landing page built for one persona, not your homepage.
If you serve Spanish speakers, half cannot find you
When a client searches abogado de inmigracion en [your city], Google looks for Spanish pages. A flag icon and translate widget is not a Spanish page. You are invisible to that search.
Google indexes structure, not language buttons
- /immigration-services
- /family-petition
- /about
- /immigration-services
- /family-petition
- /removal-defense
- /h1b-visas
- /servicios-inmigracion
- /peticion-familiar
- /defensa-deportacion
- /visas-h1b
Spanish immigration keywords frequently cost a third of the English equivalent. Fewer firms compete. Your content ranks faster. This moat is open in 2026.
You probably do not put Licensed Attorney on enough of your marketing
In Latin America, a Notario Publico is a trained legal professional. In the US, a notary public witnesses signatures. The confusion is exactly that simple and exactly that exploited.
You have seen the damage. Clients who paid $2,000 for a petition that triggered removal. Families that missed windows because the notario did not understand deadlines.
- Avoid mentioning notario fraud on the site
- Generic “experienced immigration attorney” headlines
- Bar number buried in 9px footer text
- No content explaining the difference
- Licensed Attorney + Abogado Licenciado on every page header
- State bar license number visible in the hero
- “Why a Notario Cannot File Your I-485” blog post
- Plain language explanation of what only a licensed attorney can do
Pull up your blog. Do you have a piece titled Why a Notario Cannot Help You File Your I-485? Or What to Do If You Already Paid a Notario? If not, you are leaving the highest intent search demand in your market unanswered.
I have watched a single blog post like this drive more qualified leads in a quarter than $5,000 of ad spend would.
Find your city tier before you spend
Same playbook, wildly different results depending on your metro. Most firms misjudge their own tier and either spend defensively when they should grow or grow aggressively when they should niche.
One thing about state regulations. Florida tightens rules on testimonials. California requires disclaimers around contingency fee work that affect immigration retainer ads. Texas has bilingual disclosure rules. The state bar advertising rules shift the playbook by state more than most consultants admit.
Going narrow beats going broad
Look at your last 30 cases. How many practice areas? The clients who pay most and convert fastest come from the narrowest categories. Point your marketing at the two niches with the best economics.
Why specialists outperform generalists
Niche 1: Mandamus litigation
USCIS backlogs create multi year waits. Clients tired of waiting are ready to sue under 28 U.S.C. Β§ 1361 to force a decision.
Search terms like “how to sue USCIS for delays” have low volume but the highest intent in your funnel. Most general immigration firms do not handle federal court work, so competition is thin.
nationally
Niche 2: Crim-Imm referrals
Under Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356 (2010), criminal defense attorneys must advise non citizen clients on immigration consequences. Most do not know immigration law well enough. They need you.
Position your firm as the consult criminal lawyers call. CLE presentations, public defender relationships, content aimed at the criminal bar.
from one partner
USCIS pending case count as of Q1 2026. Figure shifts quarterly with policy and processing rates.
The work that earns clients does not happen on your website
Your clients have been lied to before. By notarios. By the system. They do not trust legal advertising the way other clients do. “Immigration lawyer, call now” does not carry weight with someone who has been burned.
Offline trust work that moves cases
Know your rights workshops at community institutions
Free workshop at a church, mosque, or community center in your clients’ neighborhoods. Bilingual materials. General questions only. Trust built in one workshop converts to referrals for years.
Formal MOU with community nonprofits
They handle simple work (DACA renewals, naturalization), refer complex cases to your firm. You provide free consults to their clients. Both organizations build credibility through association.
Be present in community Facebook groups (not selling)
“Brazilians in Orlando,” “Venezolanos en Miami,” “Asian Americans Houston.” Answer general questions. Be a known name. Direct solicitation crosses bar lines and gets complaints. Being useful does not.
Sponsor community events that already exist
Cuban festival, Diwali, Dia de los Muertos, World Refugee Day. Budget $500 to $2,500 per event. Show up in person; sponsorship without attendance reads as performative.
The PI firm wins by being first to answer. You win by being known before the search ever happens.
Your clients text WhatsApp before they fill out your form
Latin American, South Asian, African, and Middle Eastern immigrant communities use WhatsApp the way American businesses use email. If your intake does not include a WhatsApp Business number, you are invisible to this channel.
The WhatsApp difference is real
Setup that does not create bar problems
Use a WhatsApp Business account separate from your personal number. Automated bilingual greetings disclose responses come from a paralegal and do not create attorney client relationships. Save all conversations for the file (WhatsApp Business exports). Convert chats into formal consults within 24 hours, where engagement letters and conflict checks happen properly.
Platform mapping that matters: WhatsApp for Latin American + South Asian. Facebook for older Filipino, Vietnamese, Caribbean. TikTok for DACA age. LinkedIn for employer sponsored cases.
If you called me tomorrow, this is what I would build first
Not what an agency would sell. Each layer earns the right to invest in the next. Year one total: $50K to $90K.
Total: $50K to $90K annually
Build order by priority
Read these next
What immigration attorneys actually ask me
How much should my immigration firm spend on marketing per month?
Immigration firms can run real marketing at much lower spend levels than other practice areas because the PPC economics are dramatically better. A solo immigration attorney can build meaningful pipeline at $2,000 to $3,000 a month, where a PI firm at the same spend has nothing to learn from. Most established immigration firms operate effectively at $4,000 to $8,000 monthly with a mix of LSA, organic content in two languages, and community presence. The number that matters more than the budget is whether the firm can answer leads at 9 PM and on weekends; immigration clients call after work because they cannot make calls during their work hours.
Do I need a Spanish website to rank in Google?
Yes if the practice serves any Spanish speaking community, which is most US immigration practice. A Se Habla Espanol banner on an English site does not capture Spanish search traffic; when someone searches abogado de inmigracion en Houston, Google looks for Spanish language pages to serve and an English only site is invisible to that query. The right architecture is dedicated Spanish subdirectories (firmname.com/es/) with hreflang tags telling Google which pages are language equivalents, plus content transcreated by native speakers, not machine translated. Spanish immigration keywords typically have lower competition than their English equivalents while still carrying significant search volume.
What is the cost per click for immigration law Google Ads?
Immigration law has the cheapest paid search costs in legal marketing. Cost per click ranges from $3 to $15 in most markets, compared to $200 to $1,000 for personal injury and $50 to $200 for family law. Spanish language immigration keywords often cost even less than English ones, sometimes $1 to $5 per click. This economics means a $2,000 monthly budget produces actionable testing data for immigration firms, where the same spend in PI gets a firm exactly nothing. The constraint is not budget; it is intake capacity and the ability to convert the volume of leads that cheap clicks produce.
How do I differentiate my firm from notario fraud in my marketing?
By using the confusion as a differentiation strategy instead of avoiding the topic. In most Latin American countries, a Notario Publico is a trained legal professional with powers similar to an attorney; in the US, a notary public has no legal training. Unscrupulous non lawyers exploit this linguistic confusion to charge immigrants for unauthorized practice. Immigration firms should prominently display Licensed Attorney plus Abogado Licenciado on every marketing piece, create educational content like Why a Notario Can Ruin Your Immigration Case in both languages, and position themselves explicitly as the legitimate alternative. This protects the community and ranks well because almost no firms are creating this content.
What niche should my immigration practice focus on?
Two niches with strong economics and thin competition: mandamus litigation and Crim-Imm referrals. Mandamus targets clients who have been waiting years for USCIS to act on filed applications and are ready to sue the federal government to force a decision; these clients are deep funnel, have the funds for federal litigation, and most general immigration firms do not handle federal court work so the competition is minimal. Crim-Imm is a B2B referral strategy targeting criminal defense attorneys who need immigration knowledge for non citizen clients under the Padilla v. Kentucky requirement to advise on immigration consequences. A single criminal defense firm can become a source of 20 to 50 referrals per year, replacing direct to consumer ad spend with relationship driven pipeline.
Which US cities are best for immigration law firm marketing?
Three tiers. Tier 1 saturated markets (New York, Los Angeles, Houston, Miami, San Francisco) have the largest demand but also the highest competition and CPC; solo practices in these markets need to niche down by visa type or community. Tier 2 strong demand markets (Atlanta, Charlotte, Tampa, Orlando, Dallas, Phoenix) have growing immigrant populations and lower attorney density; these are the arbitrage cities where the playbook works fastest. Tier 3 underserved markets (Kansas City, Indianapolis, Nashville, Columbus, Las Vegas) have measurable access to justice gaps and very thin competition; a single bilingual immigration firm with proper digital presence can dominate within 12 to 18 months in these markets.
Want to know where your immigration firm stands?
I will look at your bilingual SEO, your PPC economics, your intake coverage, your community positioning, and your compliance posture. I will tell you where the gaps are. If you are already in a good spot, I will tell you that too.
Get an immigration marketing review →
