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Google Business Profile Categories Explained: The Complete Guide for Home Services Businesses

By Anthony Louis 12 min read Apr 11, 2026

Overview

Google Business Profile categories are the single most powerful ranking factor in local search. According to the Whitespark 2026 Local Search Ranking Factors Report, your primary category scores 227 out of a possible ranking weight, making it the #1 individual factor that determines whether your business shows up in Google's local map pack. And picking the wrong category carries a penalty score of 214, meaning it doesn't just fail to help you. It actively pushes you down.

If you're a plumber, HVAC tech, electrician, roofer, or any other home services business, and your category is wrong, everything else you do is working against you. This guide breaks down exactly how categories work, which ones to pick for your trade, and the real data behind why it matters so much.

Google Business Profile map pack example showing local search results for home services businesses
The Google Business Profile map pack is where most local clicks happen. Your primary category determines whether you show up here.

What Are Google Business Profile Categories?

Google Business Profile categories are labels that tell Google what your business is and what searches it should show up for. Every listing has exactly one primary category and up to nine additional (secondary) categories, for a maximum of ten total.

Google's own rule for choosing categories: they should complete the sentence "This business IS a ___." A plumber IS a plumber. An HVAC company IS an HVAC contractor. A roofer IS a roofing contractor. Categories describe what your business is, not what services it offers. That distinction matters because it determines which searches trigger your listing.

Your primary category is publicly visible on your profile and carries the most ranking weight. Secondary categories are not shown to customers but are visible to Google's algorithm, and they influence what additional searches you appear for. Categories also unlock specific GBP features like booking buttons, service menus, and product catalogs depending on which ones you select. For the full picture on optimizing your profile beyond just categories, check out our complete Google Business Profile Optimization guide.

If you've ever heard the term "Google My Business categories," that's the same thing. Google rebranded Google My Business to Google Business Profile in November 2021, but the category system works the same way it always has. There are over 4,000 categories in Google's system, and the list is updated periodically.

Why Your Primary Category Is the Most Important Choice You'll Make

The data on this is not subtle. Primary category has been the #1 individual local ranking factor in every edition of Whitespark's Local Search Ranking Factors report, and its importance is growing. In 2023, it scored 193. In 2026, it scores 227. That's a 17.6% increase in ranking weight over three years.

Here's the full picture from the Whitespark 2026 report and the GBP API 2026 vs 2023 comparison:

RankFactorScore (2026)Score (2023)
1Primary GBP Category227193
2Proximity to Searcher225176
3Keywords in Business Title223181
8Additional GBP Categories173134

Notice that additional (secondary) categories also rank in the top 10 at position #8 with a score of 173, up from 134 in 2023. Secondary categories are not filler. They are a top-10 ranking factor.

On the flip side, an incorrect primary category carries a penalty score of 214, making it the #2 negative ranking factor. A wrong category doesn't just mean you're missing out on visibility. It means Google is actively suppressing your listing for the searches that matter most to your business.

~32%
of total local pack ranking weight comes from GBP signals, the largest single factor group. Reviews come in second at about 20% (for a full review strategy, see how to get more Google reviews for your home services business). Your category selection is responsible for nearly a third of whether you show up in the map pack or not.

Which Category Should You Pick? A Trade-by-Trade Guide

This is the section that doesn't exist anywhere else on the internet for home services businesses. Here are the exact Google Business Profile categories available for each trade, with recommendations on what to use as your primary and which secondary categories to add.

Every category name listed below is the exact name Google uses in their system. Misspelling or using an unofficial name will not work.

Plumber

PrimaryPlumber
Secondary optionsDrainage Service, Bathroom Remodeler, Kitchen Remodeler

Plumbing is straightforward. "Plumber" is the correct primary category for virtually every plumbing business. According to a YDOP study of 26,519 US plumbing companies, 94.21% use "Plumber" as their primary category. There's no real alternative that performs better.

HVAC

PrimaryDepends on your highest-volume search type (see below)
Secondary optionsHVAC Contractor, Air Conditioning Repair Service, Air Conditioning Contractor, Heating Contractor, Furnace Repair Service, Air Duct Cleaning Service

HVAC is the most nuanced category decision in home services. A March 2026 HVAC Webmasters study of 100 top-ranking GBPs across 10 Dallas-Fort Worth cities found dramatic differences in performance by category for "ac repair [city]" searches:

Primary Category% of ListingsTop-3 Placement Rate
HVAC Contractor40%15% (worst)
Air Conditioning Repair Service29%45% (best)
Air Conditioning Contractor23%35%

The most popular pick (HVAC Contractor) had the worst performance. The less common but more query-specific pick (Air Conditioning Repair Service) had the best performance by a wide margin. This is because Google rewards category-query alignment: when someone searches "ac repair," a business categorized as "Air Conditioning Repair Service" is a more precise match than "HVAC Contractor."

The caveat: this study was based on AC repair queries specifically. If heating is your biggest call driver, "Heating Contractor" may outperform for heating searches. Some practitioners recommend seasonal category rotation (Air Conditioning Repair Service in spring/summer, Heating Contractor in fall/winter), though this carries re-verification risk every time you switch.

Bottom line for HVAC: Pick the primary category that matches what most of your customers are searching for. If AC repair drives 70% of your calls, use "Air Conditioning Repair Service." If you're evenly split, "HVAC Contractor" covers the broadest base. Then fill in the rest as secondary categories.

Electrician

PrimaryElectrician
Secondary optionsElectrical Installation Service (keep it tight, 1-3 max)

Electricians are an interesting exception. BrightLocal's study of 1,050 businesses found that electricians actually performed best with zero or three additional categories, and worst with five or more. This makes "Electrician" one of the few trades where the recommendation is to keep it lean.

Roofer

PrimaryRoofing Contractor
Secondary optionsGutter Cleaning Service

Roofing is straightforward. "Roofing Contractor" is the standard primary category. Google does not have a separate "Roofer" category in their system. If you also handle gutter cleaning (many roofers do), add "Gutter Cleaning Service" as a secondary. Note that there is no "Gutter Installation Service" or "Gutter Contractors" category in Google's system.

Cleaners

PrimaryDepends on your specialty
Secondary optionsHouse Cleaning Service, Carpet Cleaning Service, Window Cleaning Service, Pool Cleaning Service, Tile Cleaning Service, Gutter Cleaning Service, Janitorial Service

For cleaning businesses, your primary category should match your core service. If you're primarily a residential house cleaner, use "House Cleaning Service." If you're a carpet cleaning specialist, use "Carpet Cleaning Service." Add the rest of your service types as secondary categories.

Other Home Services Trades

TradePrimary CategoryKey Notes
HandymanHandyman, Handywoman, HandypersonGoogle updated this category in January 2023 to be more inclusive. All three names are part of the official category.
LandscaperLandscaperSecondary options: Lawn Care Service, Landscape Designer, Lawn Sprinkler System Contractor, Gardener
Pest ControlPest Control ServiceCheck Google's category picker for additional pest-related secondaries specific to your services
Garage DoorGarage Door SupplierCheck the GBP category picker for additional garage door categories. Some guides reference "Garage Door Repair Service" but it may not appear in all regions.
PainterPainter"Painting" and "Painter" are two different categories. "Painter" is the correct one for house painting contractors.
General ContractorGeneral ContractorSecondary: Construction Company

How Many Categories Should You Use?

This is one of the most debated topics in local SEO because Google's official guidance directly conflicts with what the data shows.

Google says: "Choose the fewest number of categories it takes to describe your overall core business."

The data says: More relevant categories generally means better visibility.

BrightLocal's study of 1,050 businesses across seven primary categories found that businesses with four additional categories averaged the best map ranking (5.9 out of 20) compared to businesses with zero additional categories (7.6 average). That's a meaningful difference in visibility.

Sterling Sky tested category dilution directly and found no evidence that adding relevant categories hurts your existing rankings. In one test, a dentist in NYC added several additional categories and maintained all core rankings for "Dentist" and "Dentist Near Me" while gaining visibility for new category-related searches.

But there's a catch. When Darren Shaw (founder of Whitespark) tested adding completely irrelevant categories like "hot dog stand," "hair removal service," and "gazebo builder" to his own listing, rankings dropped measurably. The categories recovered when the irrelevant ones were removed. So the rule is clear: more relevant categories is good, irrelevant categories is bad.

The electrician exception: BrightLocal's data showed that electricians are an outlier. Electricians with 5+ categories had worse rankings (7.9 average) than those with 0-3 categories. This may be because "Electrician" is already such a precise category that additional categories dilute relevance rather than expanding it.

Recommended Number of Categories by Trade

TradeRecommended TotalWhy
Plumber2-4Limited relevant categories available
HVAC5-7Many relevant subcategories (AC, heating, furnace, duct)
Electrician1-3BrightLocal data shows best performance at zero or three additional categories; five or more hurts
Roofer2-4Limited relevant categories, add gutters if applicable
Cleaners3-6Match to actual service types offered

Every secondary category you add should represent a service you currently offer and can actually field calls for. Adding categories for services you don't provide creates bad behavioral signals (short calls, no appointments booked) that can hurt your rankings over time. Your categories also directly affect which searches trigger your Local Services Ads. For more on that connection, see how your GBP connects to Local Services Ads.

Common Category Mistakes That Kill Your Rankings

These are the mistakes we see most often when auditing Google Business Profiles for home services businesses:

  1. Wrong primary category. This is the most damaging mistake you can make. An HVAC company using "General Contractor" instead of "HVAC Contractor" is invisible for HVAC searches. The Whitespark penalty score for an incorrect primary category is 214, meaning it actively suppresses your listing.
  2. Too-broad primary category. "Contractor" instead of "Roofing Contractor." "Service establishment" instead of "Electrician." Google rewards specificity. The more precisely your category matches the search query, the better you rank for that query.
  3. Adding categories for services you don't offer. If you add "Gas Installation Service" but don't do gas work, you'll get calls you can't convert. Those dead-end interactions signal to Google that your listing isn't a good match.
  4. Adding irrelevant categories to game the system. Darren Shaw (Whitespark) tested this directly on his own listing. Adding unrelated categories caused a measurable ranking drop that recovered when the irrelevant categories were removed. Don't do it.
  5. Using too few categories. Many home services businesses use only 1-2 categories when they could legitimately use 5-7. Every unused relevant category slot is visibility left on the table. (Exception: electricians, where fewer is better.)
  6. Never reviewing categories after initial setup. Google adds new categories periodically. A category that didn't exist when you first set up your profile might exist now. Sterling Sky tracks these changes monthly. No core trades categories (plumbing, HVAC, electrical, roofing, cleaning) have changed in 2025-2026, but it's still worth checking annually.
  7. Ignoring category-query alignment. The HVAC Webmasters data makes this crystal clear. The most popular category (HVAC Contractor at 40% usage) had the worst top-3 placement rate (15%) for AC repair searches. Match your primary category to what your customers actually search for, not what sounds best on paper.

How to Change Your Category (and What to Watch Out For)

Changing your category is simple to do but can have significant consequences if you're not prepared.

The process:

  1. Sign into your Google Business Profile
  2. Click "Edit profile" then "Business category"
  3. Change your primary or add/remove secondary categories
  4. Save

What happens next: Changes typically reflect within a few days, but ranking impact can take two to four weeks to fully stabilize. Google treats a primary category change as a major edit, which means it may trigger re-verification. If re-verification isn't completed, your listing can be temporarily suspended (invisible in search and maps). If you haven't verified yet or need to understand the verification process, see our guide on how to create a Google Business Profile.

The cautionary tale: One widely reported example in the local SEO community involves an HVAC company that switched its primary category from "Air Conditioning Repair Service" to "Air Conditioning Contractor" and dropped from the #1 spot to #31 in the local pack. The category that looks like a minor adjustment on paper can mean the difference between dominating your market and disappearing from it.

Strategic advice:

  • Don't change your primary category during your busy season. If something goes wrong, you don't want to be invisible when demand peaks.
  • Have a re-verification plan ready. Google may require video verification or a postcard, and delays can cost you weeks of visibility.
  • Change secondary categories first to test the waters. Adding or removing secondary categories is lower risk than switching your primary.
  • If you're switching to match seasonal demand (AC in summer, heating in winter), weigh the visibility gain against the re-verification risk each time.
Already suspended?

If your Google Business Profile has been suspended or deactivated, we can help you get it back. Anthony Louis Media specializes in GBP suspension recovery for home services businesses. Don't wait — every day your profile is down is a day your competitors are getting the calls.

Not sure if your categories are costing you visibility?

Get a Free GBP Audit Call or Text: (929) 487-3250

Final Thoughts

Google Business Profile categories are the highest-leverage, lowest-effort optimization available to any home services business. It takes five minutes to change, it costs nothing, and the data shows it has more ranking impact than any other single factor in local search.

Most home services businesses set their category once when they create their profile and never look at it again. Some picked the wrong one from the start. Others are leaving visibility on the table by only using one or two categories when they could legitimately use five or six.

The fix is simple: check your primary category against the trade-specific recommendations in this guide, make sure it matches what your customers actually search for (not just what sounds right), add relevant secondary categories for the services you actually provide, and review it once a year to catch any new categories Google has added. For a field-by-field action plan covering categories and everything else, use our GBP Optimization Checklist.

If you want the full picture on optimizing your Google Business Profile beyond just categories, check out our complete Google Business Profile Optimization guide. And if you're brand new to GBP, start with our beginner's guide to what a Google Business Profile actually is.

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