What feeds a "near me" AI Overview for spas
Google's AI Overview answers "massage near me" or "best day spa near me" by drawing on your Google Business Profile data, the text and recency of your reviews, and how clearly your listing states the services you offer and the area you serve. It does not scan your whole website line by line the way a human reader would. It leans on structured, current, and specific information that is easy to match to the searcher's intent.
If your business profile is thin, outdated, or vague about services, the AI Overview has less to work with and is more likely to name a competitor whose information is easier to confirm and quote.
AI Overviews and zero-click search, explained plainly
An AI Overview is the summary Google generates at the top of search results, written by its AI model rather than linking straight to a single webpage. It often answers the question directly on the results page, which means the searcher never has to click through to any business's website. This is called zero-click search: the user gets their answer, and possibly a short list of businesses, without visiting a site at all.
For a day spa, this changes what "being found" means. Ranking on page one used to guarantee some website traffic. Now, showing up inside the AI-written answer matters more than the website click, because that is where many searchers make their decision before they ever leave the search page.
Why your Google Business Profile and reviews carry so much weight
Your Google Business Profile is the single most direct source Google can verify in real time: your business name, address, phone number, hours, categories, photos, and posted updates. Reviews add a second layer of trust signal, since language customers use ("deep tissue," "prenatal massage," "couples package") often mirrors the exact phrases people type into search. Together, these two sources are what the AI Overview leans on most heavily when deciding who to name.
A profile with accurate hours, current photos, and a steady flow of reviews mentioning specific treatments gives Google concrete, recent detail to summarize. A profile last updated months ago, with generic reviews saying only "great service," offers far less for the AI Overview to confidently repeat. Consistency between your profile and what customers say about you matters as much as either one alone.
Why location and service specificity drive inclusion
AI Overviews match searcher intent to business detail at a fairly granular level: not just "spa," but "hot stone massage in your neighborhood" or "couples spa day near your landmark." A business that lists broad, vague categories like "wellness services" gives the AI Overview little to match against a specific query. A business that names its actual treatments, service area, and any specialties gives it much more to work with.
This is why two spas in the same city can get very different treatment from an AI Overview. The one that names "60-minute Swedish massage," "prenatal massage," or "hot stone therapy" directly in its profile and on its site is easier for the AI to match to a searcher asking for exactly that. The one that only says "massage services" is competing on a much vaguer basis, even if the actual treatment menu is just as strong.
Actions that improve your odds of being named
Being named in an AI Overview is not about tricking Google. It is about making the business easy to verify, current, and specific enough to match real searches. Search engine optimization (SEO) for AI answers now overlaps heavily with what's sometimes called AEO (answer engine optimization) or GEO (generative engine optimization): structuring information so an AI model can lift it cleanly into a direct answer.
Concrete steps that make a measurable difference:
- Keep your Google Business Profile complete: accurate hours, current phone number, correct address, and services listed by name rather than generic category.
- Add photos regularly, especially of treatment rooms, staff, and specific services, since fresher visual content signals an active, real business.
- Encourage reviews that mention specific treatments and outcomes ("relief from chronic back pain after a 90-minute deep tissue session") rather than generic praise, since specific language matches specific searches.
- Respond to reviews, including negative ones, since response activity is part of what signals an actively managed profile.
- Use schema markup on your website: structured code embedded in your site's HTML that tells search engines exactly what a page is about (a service, a price, a location) in a format machines can read directly, without guessing from prose.
- State your service area and specialties in plain language on your site's homepage and service pages, not just in your business profile, so both sources agree.
None of these steps guarantee a mention in any specific AI Overview, since Google does not publish the exact weighting of these signals. But they consistently increase the amount of clear, current, and specific information available for the AI Overview to draw from, which is the only lever a business owner actually controls.
How to check your own progress without waiting on anyone's report
Search your own business by name and by service type ("massage near me," "day spa in your city") from a device not logged into your business accounts, ideally in an incognito or private browser window, and note whether an AI Overview appears and whether it names you. Do this once a week rather than once a month, since AI Overview results can shift faster than traditional rankings.
Check your Google Business Profile dashboard directly for the number and recency of reviews, and read a sample of new reviews for whether they mention specific treatments by name. Compare your listed services and service area against what competitors list, since gaps in specificity are usually visible just by looking. This kind of direct spot-check, done consistently, tells you more about real progress than any summary someone else hands you.