Website speed and SEO: the hidden cost of a slow site
Speed is the part of a website nobody sees until it's gone. A site can look flawless and still quietly lose customers and search rankings simply because it takes too long to load. And unlike a design flaw, slowness is invisible to the owner — your own site always feels fast on the device and connection you built it on.
Your visitors don't have that luxury. They're on phones, on patchy connections, with a competitor one tap away. Every extra second of load time is a reason to leave.
Why Google cares about speed
Google's job is to send people to pages that give them a good experience. A page that loads slowly is, by definition, a worse experience — so Google factors loading performance into how it ranks pages. It measures this through what it calls Core Web Vitals: a small set of signals covering how fast the main content appears, how quickly the page responds to taps, and how stable the layout is as it loads.
You don't need to memorise the technical names. The takeaway is simpler: a faster site has a real ranking advantage over a slower competitor, all else being equal. And the slower site also loses visitors before they ever convert, which sends its own negative signals back to Google.
Speed is the rare upgrade that helps your rankings and your conversions at the same time. Almost nothing else does both.
What actually makes sites slow
In our experience rebuilding sites, the same handful of culprits show up again and again:
- Huge, unoptimised images. A single oversized photo can outweigh an entire well-built page. This is the most common offender by far.
- Too many plugins and scripts. Every add-on loads its own code. Ten "small" features can add up to a heavy, sluggish page.
- Bloated themes and builders. Drag-and-drop convenience often ships a lot of code you never use — and the browser still has to load all of it.
- Cheap or distant hosting. If the server is slow to respond, nothing else you do can fully make up for it.
The practical wins
You don't need to rebuild everything to see a difference. The highest-impact fixes are usually straightforward:
- Compress and properly size every image before it goes live.
- Remove plugins and scripts you don't truly need.
- Use clean, modern code instead of heavy page builders where possible.
- Choose quality hosting and enable caching so repeat visits are instant.
If you want a quick reality check, run your homepage through a free tool like Google's PageSpeed Insights. It'll show you, in plain numbers, how your site performs on mobile — and exactly what's slowing it down.
The bottom line
A slow website is a tax you pay on every visitor, every day — in lost rankings, lost trust, and lost sales. The good news is that speed is fixable, and the return is immediate. Build it fast from the start, or fix it now. Either way, it's one of the best investments a business can make in its online presence.
Not sure how fast your site really is?
We build websites that load fast, rank well, and convert — with performance baked in from the first line of code.
Book a free consultation →