
SOCi has published its 2026 SOCi100, a ranking of enterprise brands with the strongest visibility across local search, social media, online reputation systems, and AI-driven discovery platforms. The list evaluates more than 2,700 brands operating across roughly 350,000 locations, offering a rare large-scale snapshot of who actually gets surfaced when consumers search for nearby services.
This is the second year SOCi has released the index, and the methodology has evolved. The 2026 edition adds AI visibility as a formal measurement, reflecting how consumers increasingly rely on assistants such as ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Perplexity to choose businesses.
Visibility Is Shifting From Ranking to Selection
Traditional search optimization focused on page position. The new environment favors selection. AI systems frequently present a single recommended option rather than a list of ten blue links. That changes the stakes dramatically.
Monica Ho, Chief Marketing Officer at SOCi, framed the issue clearly: being visible now means being chosen. A brand can rank well across thousands of pages yet still lose if an AI assistant selects a competitor as the definitive answer.
Local Signals Drive Both Search and AI Outcomes
The ranking is derived from SOCi’s Local Visibility Index (LVI), which measures performance across several factors. These include business listing accuracy, review volume and sentiment, social engagement at the location level, and consistency across directories and maps.
These signals matter because AI systems rely heavily on structured public data. A location with incomplete hours, outdated contact details, or inconsistent naming can quietly disappear from recommendations.
Review patterns also play a large role. High volumes of recent, positive feedback increase the likelihood that a brand will be surfaced as trustworthy. Low activity signals the opposite.
Top Performers Reflect Operational Discipline
The brands at the top of the list tend to operate large networks of physical locations and maintain strong local marketing programs. Planet Fitness secured the number one position, followed by Public Storage and Hobby Lobby. Restaurants, retail chains, automotive services, and fitness companies dominate the upper ranks.
These organizations treat local presence as a coordinated system rather than a patchwork of individual store efforts. Corporate strategy aligns with location-level execution. Every branch maintains accurate information, responds to reviews, and participates in local engagement.
Top 10 Most Visible Brands in Local and AI Search
| Rank | Brand | Industry | LVI Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Planet Fitness | Fitness | 73.7 |
| 2 | Public Storage | Storage | 73.0 |
| 3 | Hobby Lobby | Retail | 71.1 |
| 4 | LongHorn Steakhouse | Restaurants | 70.7 |
| 5 | Mattress Firm | Retail | 70.3 |
| 6 | European Wax Center | Personal Care | 70.2 |
| 7 | FASTSIGNS | Home & Office Services | 70.0 |
| 8 | America’s Tire | Automotive | 69.9 |
| 9 | O’Reilly Auto Parts | Automotive | 69.5 |
| 10 | Culver’s | Restaurants | 69.2 |
Key Findings From the 2026 Index
The data highlights several trends shaping modern discovery. AI systems often narrow consumer choice to a single brand recommendation. That makes visibility fragile. Small differences in data quality or reputation can determine the outcome.
Consistent location data across directories significantly improves performance across both traditional search engines and AI assistants. Local social engagement also contributes signals that reinforce credibility.
In practical terms, fragmented local marketing efforts no longer scale. Brands that treat each location as a standalone entity risk sending mixed signals to search systems.
Insights From the Full Top 100 List
A review of the entire SOCi100 reveals patterns beyond the headline rankings. Retail brands account for a large share of the list, reflecting extensive physical footprints and frequent consumer interaction. Automotive services, fitness chains, and healthcare providers also appear prominently, industries where proximity strongly influences choice.
Another notable pattern is the relative absence of purely digital companies. Online-only brands lack the local data signals that drive discovery in “near me” scenarios. Physical presence still matters.
Mid-ranked entries include major national chains such as Target, Best Buy, Walgreens, and The Home Depot. Their placement suggests that scale alone does not guarantee top visibility. Execution at the local level remains decisive.
Financial services firms, tax preparation companies, and pet care providers also appear throughout the list. These sectors depend heavily on trust, which aligns closely with review sentiment metrics.
Hotels and lodging brands appear lower overall, possibly reflecting seasonal variability in reviews and less frequent local engagement compared with retail or restaurants.
Why This Matters for Enterprise Marketing Leaders
The SOCi100 serves as both recognition and warning. For multi-location organizations, local marketing can no longer be treated as an afterthought. It directly affects revenue, brand perception, and competitive positioning.
The research implies that winning brands operate centralized systems that enforce data accuracy, monitor reputation, and coordinate responses across locations. This approach reduces inconsistency and strengthens trust signals.
From an SEO (Search Engine Optimization) standpoint, the message aligns with long-standing principles: structured data, consistent citations, active engagement, and credible reviews produce measurable results. AI platforms simply amplify those effects.
AI Discovery Raises the Stakes
One overlooked implication is that AI assistants compress the funnel. Consumers who receive a single recommendation may never compare alternatives. Visibility becomes binary: chosen or ignored.
This environment favors brands with strong reputational signals and clear identity across platforms. It punishes ambiguity. A business that cannot be confidently verified may be excluded entirely.
In that sense, AI discovery behaves less like a search engine and more like a referral system. The assistant acts as a gatekeeper, not a directory.
What the Rankings Suggest About the Future
The SOCi100 reflects a transition already underway. Digital visibility now depends on operational discipline across thousands of small details rather than a handful of headline tactics. Accurate listings, timely responses, consistent messaging, and ongoing engagement form the foundation.
Organizations that treat local presence as infrastructure will likely remain visible. Those that neglect it may find their competitors recommended instead, even if their brand is widely known.
The broader lesson is simple. Search results once displayed options. AI increasingly delivers answers. Brands that want to be those answers must earn that position through reliable data, positive reputation, and sustained local activity.
For enterprise leaders, the SOCi100 is less a trophy case and more a preview of how discovery works now. Visibility is no longer about being found. It is about being trusted enough to be selected.