Search Volume

The number of times a search query is shown per month. How to use search volume for keyword research and classification (high‑, medium‑, low‑volume).

In brief

Search volume is the approximate number of times a specific search query is shown (appears in search results) to users over a period, usually a month. Data is provided by tools such as Yandex Wordstat, Google Keyword Planner, Ahrefs, Semrush. Volume helps estimate topic popularity and classify keywords into high‑, medium‑, and low‑volume.

What Is Search Volume

Search volume is the number of times a particular keyword query is shown (appears in search results) to users over a set period, usually one month. Search engines do not reveal exact numbers, so all data is approximate and aggregated, but it is sufficient to compare topic popularity.

TXT
Example (illustrative):
Query "buy laptop" — 45,000 monthly searches (high volume)
Query "buy laptop for programming" — 450 monthly searches (medium volume)
Query "buy asus tuf gaming f15 i7 32gb laptop" — 10 monthly searches (low volume)

Classification: High, Medium, Low

In SEO, queries are often divided by volume. The boundaries depend heavily on niche and geography.

  • High‑volume (VCh) — several thousand searches per month and above. Usually 1–2 words, highly competitive, may be less targeted (e.g., 'laptop').
  • Medium‑volume (SCh) — from a few hundred to 2–3 thousand searches. Often include a qualifier ('buy laptop cheap').
  • Low‑volume (NCh) — up to a few hundred searches. Long‑tail phrases that precisely describe a need. Low competition, often high conversion.
  • Micro‑low volume — a handful of searches per month. Used for extremely precise intent (e.g., niche technical queries).
In a highly competitive niche (e.g., real estate), the high‑volume threshold may be 10,000+. In narrow B2B, even 200 searches could be considered high. Rely on relative values within your market.

Where to Get Data

Main sources of search volume data:

  • Yandex Wordstat — free tool, shows monthly impressions in Yandex with region and device filtering. Most popular for Russian‑speaking markets.
  • Google Keyword Planner — free with a Google Ads account. Shows approximate ranges (e.g., 1k–10k).
  • Ahrefs Keywords Explorer — paid, but more precise numbers and country breakdown.
  • Semrush Keyword Magic Tool — similar to Ahrefs.
  • Moz Keyword Explorer — another paid tool.
TXT
Example workflow for building a keyword universe:
1. Collect all relevant queries starting from a head term using Wordstat.
2. Clean out irrelevant or duplicate terms.
3. Prioritise by volume/difficulty ratio.
4. Expand long‑tail by adding modifiers.

How to Use Search Volume

  • Building a keyword map — collect high‑volume for reach, medium‑volume for core traffic, low‑volume for conversion pages.
  • Content prioritisation — first create pages for high‑volume queries with low/medium competition.
  • Estimating difficulty — higher volume usually means higher competition. Low‑volume terms are easier to rank for.
  • PPC planning — use high‑volume keywords in Google Ads but be ready for high CPC.

Limitations and Accuracy

Treat search volume as a directional guide, not absolute truth:

  • Data is averaged — different tools show very different numbers due to different sources and rounding methods.
  • Seasonality is ignored — queries about 'new year gifts' in May show low volume but spike in December.
  • Does not show actual clicks — volume is impressions, not clicks. Use CTR estimates for traffic potential.
  • Geo sensitivity — global volume may be huge, but for local business local volume matters.
Always consider region when analysing search volume. For local business (e.g., 'plumber moscow'), global volume is meaningless.

Common questions

Relevance matters more. A query with 1,000 volume but low conversion may be less valuable than a query with 100 volume and high purchase intent.
Yes, a long‑tail strategy (massively creating pages for thousands of low‑volume queries) can generate significant organic traffic, especially for informational and e‑commerce sites.
Run a paid campaign; after some time, the keyword report will show actual impressions for queries that triggered ads. But this is expensive.
They use different search engines (Yandex vs Google) and different counting methods. Wordstat shows real Yandex impressions; Keyword Planner shows approximated ranges for Google Ads.
Wordstat – monthly (~beginning of month). Google Keyword Planner – continuously with a delay. Paid tools update every 1–3 months.
Direct contacts

Discuss your project?

Share your goals and website context — I will suggest a practical next step.

Search Volume — What is it?