Category pages sit at the top of your site architecture and target your highest-value commercial keywords. Most are left as thin product grids. Properly optimised, they outrank individual product pages and drive the majority of organic revenue.
Category pages sit at the intersection of architecture and commerce. They sit above product or service pages in your site hierarchy, they target the broadest and most commercially valuable keywords in your niche, and they pass ranking authority down to every page beneath them. Getting them right is one of the highest-leverage SEO activities available to any site.
Most category pages are treated as navigation a grid of products or a list of services with a heading and nothing else. Google has to choose between dozens of identically thin pages all competing for the same commercial query. Without supporting content, internal linking structure, schema markup and clear keyword targeting, even the most authoritative domains struggle to rank category pages consistently.
Category page optimisation is the process of turning those thin navigational pages into the strongest-ranking pages on your site. It applies across eCommerce stores, B2C businesses, directories, marketplaces and any site that organises content or products into structured categories. The principles overlap significantly with on-page SEO but category pages have specific requirements that go beyond individual page optimisation.
Done correctly, a well-optimised category page ranks for hundreds of related queries simultaneously, drives a disproportionate share of organic traffic and reduces your dependence on paid channels. For eCommerce businesses specifically, a single top-ranking category page can generate more revenue than dozens of individual product pages combined.
No other page type on your site combines broad keyword coverage, high commercial intent and authority-passing structure in the way a well-optimised category page does. Here is why they deserve more investment than any other SEO activity.
Category-level queries "women's running shoes", "SEO agency Belfast", "electric bikes under £1000" have far higher search volumes than product or long-tail queries. A single well-ranking category page can drive more traffic than hundreds of individual product pages combined. This is why eCommerce SEO and B2C SEO strategies centre on category page performance above all else.
A properly optimised category page for "women's running shoes" can rank for dozens of related queries "ladies running trainers", "best women's running shoes", "women's running shoes wide fit" without separate pages for each. The keyword breadth of a single well-optimised category page is substantially higher than any individual product or blog post.
Category pages sit high in your site hierarchy. PageRank and internal link equity flows from category pages down to product and service pages below them. A well-linked category page lifts the rankings of every page it links to, making category page optimisation a force multiplier across your entire site architecture.
Businesses paying for Google Shopping and PPC to appear for category-level queries are paying for visibility they could own organically. A category page at position 1 drives the same commercial traffic at zero ongoing cost per click, permanently. This is the core argument for SEO over PPC for businesses at scale.
Category page optimisation is not a single task. It spans keyword targeting, content, technical configuration, schema markup and internal linking structure. Here is what we cover.
Category pages should target the broadest, highest-volume commercial queries in your niche, not the same keywords as your product pages. We map keyword sets to category pages to ensure each page has a clear primary focus, supporting terms and no cannibalisation with pages above or below it in the hierarchy.
A category page with no supporting content gives Google nothing to work with. We write keyword-targeted category introductions, buying guides and contextual copy that explains what the category covers, answers the questions buyers ask at this stage and signals clearly to Google what the page should rank for. This works in tandem with your on-page SEO strategy.
Category pages benefit from several schema types that most sites do not implement. BreadcrumbList schema clarifies your site hierarchy to Google. ItemList schema allows Google to understand and display your category contents in search results. For eCommerce, Offer and Product schema on category pages enables rich results before users even click.
Category pages should receive internal links from your homepage, navigation, related content and supporting blog posts. They should also link down to subcategories and products in a structured, intentional way. Most sites have category pages that are either not linked to from key hub pages, or that link to products randomly rather than by ranking priority.
Filter and facet systems on category pages generate enormous numbers of URL variants that can devastate crawl budget and create duplicate content across an entire catalogue. Managing this correctly is one of the highest-impact technical interventions available on eCommerce and large content sites. See our eCommerce SEO service for more on this specific challenge.
Category pages are typically among the heaviest pages on a site, loading dozens of product images and filter components simultaneously. Core Web Vitals scores on category pages directly affect rankings for the commercial queries they target. Slow category pages cost rankings regardless of how well the content is optimised.
Category page mistakes are almost universal. Most sites have several of these active simultaneously, suppressing rankings on the exact pages that would generate the most organic revenue if they performed correctly.
The most common category page mistake. A page with a heading, a filter bar and a grid of product thumbnails gives Google no signals about what the page covers, who it is for or why it should rank above a competitor's equivalent page. Google has no content to evaluate and no reason to prefer it.
When category pages and product pages target the same keywords, they compete against each other rather than complementing each other. Google is forced to choose which page to rank, often choosing neither in favour of a competitor site that has clearer keyword hierarchy. This is one of the most common structural SEO problems in eCommerce.
Colour, size, brand and price filter combinations generate unique URLs for every permutation. On a category with 50 products and 10 filter options, this can produce hundreds of thousands of indexable pages with near-identical content. This destroys crawl budget, dilutes PageRank and confuses Google about which URL is the canonical category page.
Many category pages use the category name as an H1 without any keyword research behind it. "Women" is not a keyword. "Shoes" is not optimised. "Women's Running Shoes" is. The H1 on a category page is one of the strongest keyword signals on the page and most are either missing, duplicated from the page title or not targeting the right primary term.
Category pages with dozens of products across multiple paginated pages (/category?page=2) commonly have all their internal link equity concentrated on page 1 while products on pages 2 and beyond receive none. Products buried in pagination are effectively invisible to search engines regardless of how relevant they are.
BreadcrumbList, ItemList and for eCommerce stores, Product and Offer schema are all applicable to category pages. Without them, Google has to infer your site structure and category contents without explicit signals. Competitors with correctly implemented schema gain rich result eligibility and clearer hierarchy signals that translate directly into ranking advantages.
The principles of category page optimisation are universal but the implementation differs significantly depending on which platform your site is built on. Here is what that looks like in practice.
WordPress category pages whether WooCommerce shop categories or standard WordPress archive pages offer the most SEO control of any platform. Category descriptions can be added directly in the WordPress admin, and plugins like Rank Math give fine-grained control over meta data and schema. The main challenges are taxonomy proliferation and tag archive dilution.
Shopify collections are the equivalent of category pages. They support a description field which can accept HTML, making content addition straightforward. The main Shopify category challenges are the duplicate URL issue between /collections/ and /products/ paths, limited faceted navigation control and the inability to customise URL structures without apps. See our eCommerce SEO service for full Shopify category guidance.
Magento has the most complex category SEO configuration of any major eCommerce platform. Its layered navigation system generates URL parameters for every filter combination, and the default configuration indexes these creating thousands of near-duplicate category variants. Category landing page configuration, canonical settings and crawl management all require deliberate configuration.
Wix and Squarespace both support category-style organisation through their blog category and store collection features. SEO control is more limited than on WordPress or a custom build, but category content, meta data and basic schema can still be configured. The strategy focuses on maximising within the platform's constraints rather than fighting against its architecture.
We work across all major platforms. See our full platform SEO hub for platform-specific guidance, or get in touch to discuss your specific setup.
Category page optimisation works best as part of a broader SEO strategy. Here are the services most closely related to what you have just read.
The broader discipline that category page optimisation sits within. Full on-page SEO covering title tags, headings, content, internal linking and structured data across your entire site.
Learn moreFull eCommerce SEO strategy covering category pages, product pages, schema markup, faceted navigation management and GA4 eCommerce tracking.
Learn moreSEO for consumer-facing businesses where category-level commercial queries drive the majority of organic revenue. Built around ranking for the terms buyers use at the point of decision.
Learn moreBreadcrumbList, ItemList and Product schema for category pages. Structured data that clarifies your site hierarchy and enables rich results for category-level queries in Google.
Learn moreCrawl budget management, faceted navigation handling, canonical tags and pagination the technical foundations that determine whether your category pages are correctly indexed and ranked.
Learn moreThe commercial argument for owning category-level traffic organically rather than paying for it through Google Shopping and search ads indefinitely.
Learn more