The Right Way to Do SEO for Fintech Product Pages (Payments, Lending, Insurance Tech)
A fintech product page has a harder job than most product pages.
It needs to rank for searches with strong buying intent. It needs to explain a regulated financial product clearly enough that a stranger trusts it with their money or their customers’ money. And it needs to do both without sounding like a brochure or a legal disclaimer.
Most fintech product pages fail at this in one of two ways.
Some read like a sales pitch. Confident claims, feature lists, big numbers. A buyer finishes reading and still doesn’t know exactly how the product works.
Others read like a terms and conditions page. So careful and hedged that nothing on the page actually helps a buyer decide if this solves their problem.
What a Fintech Product Page Is Competing Against
Before getting into structure, it helps to know what’s actually going on in the buyer’s head when they land on the page.
The Buyer Already Knows the Category
By the time someone lands on a payments or lending product page, they usually already know what category of product they’re looking for.
They’re not asking “what is a payment gateway.” They’re asking “does this payment gateway work for my situation.”
This changes what the page needs to do. It doesn’t need to start from zero. It needs to confirm fit, fast.
A Real Scenario: The Three-Tab Buyer
A finance manager at a mid-sized e-commerce company is evaluating payment providers. They open three product pages in three tabs.
All three pages have similar headlines. “Modern payment infrastructure for growing businesses.”
Two of the pages spend the first three sections talking about the company’s mission and why payments matter.
The third page’s second section is titled “Settlement Times by Currency” with an actual table.
The finance manager closes the first two tabs within 30 seconds. They stay on the third page for four minutes.
This is not because the third product is better. It’s because the third page answered a real question the buyer had, while the other two were still talking about themselves.
The One-Sentence Test
One small thing separated the winning page from the other two: the very first sentence.
What the Product Does, Stated Once, Clearly
Every fintech product page should be able to pass this test: can someone understand what the product does from the first sentence alone, without reading anything else.
“A payment infrastructure platform” fails this test. It’s true, but it tells the reader nothing they didn’t already know from the category.
“A payment gateway built for subscription businesses that need to accept recurring payments in 40 currencies” passes. It’s specific enough that a reader can immediately tell if this is relevant to them.
Why This Sentence Does More Work Than It Looks Like
This single sentence often becomes the page’s H1, the meta description, and the first thing repeated in outreach emails and sales decks.
If this sentence is vague, every other piece of content built around the page inherits that vagueness. If it’s specific, everything downstream gets easier to write.
Payments Pages: The Buyer Already Has a Payment Setup
A buyer looking at a payments product page is almost never starting from zero. They already have a way to accept payments.
Why This Changes Everything About the Page
They’re not deciding whether to accept payments. They’re deciding whether to switch, or whether to add a second provider for a specific use case.
This means the page is being read against an existing setup the buyer already understands. Generic descriptions of “how payments work” waste the reader’s time, because they already know.
What This Buyer Actually Wants to Confirm
| What the Buyer Wants to Know | Why It Matters to Them |
|---|---|
| Which currencies and payment methods are supported | Whether it covers the markets they sell into |
| How long settlement takes | Cash flow planning |
| What happens with a failed or disputed payment | This is where their current provider causes them the most pain |
| How pricing compares for their transaction volume | Whether switching is worth the effort |
A Real Scenario: The Page That Talks About Disputes
Most payments product pages describe the happy path. Customer pays, money arrives, everyone’s happy.
One payments company added a section called “When a Payment Doesn’t Go Through” that explains, in plain language, what happens with a declined card, what the retry process looks like, and how disputes get flagged.
This section wasn’t designed to attract new search traffic. But it became one of the most-read sections on the page, based on scroll tracking.
The reason was simple. Anyone who has run a payments operation has dealt with failed payments and disputes. A page that talks about this signals the company has actually operated in this space, not just built a clean checkout flow.
Lending Pages: Eligibility Comes Before Features
The buyer’s mindset here is completely different from payments. With payments, they’re comparing two things they already understand. With lending, the first question isn’t even about the product, it’s about themselves.
The Question Buyers Ask First
For a lending product, the first question in a buyer’s head is rarely “what does this do.”
It’s “would my business even qualify for this.”
A lending page that opens with features, interest rates, and funding speed, without addressing eligibility, loses readers who assume the product isn’t built for them, even when it might be.
A Real Scenario: The Page That Lost a Qualified Buyer
A small business owner running a two-year-old logistics company looks at a lending product page.
The page leads with “Get funded in 24 hours” and a list of benefits. Nowhere does it mention what kind of business this is for.
The owner assumes this is built for tech startups, because that’s the tone of the page, and leaves.
In reality, this lender specifically serves logistics and transportation businesses. But nothing on the page said so.
What Should Come Before the Features
| Section | What It Answers |
|---|---|
| Who this is for | Business type, size, revenue range, time in operation |
| What affects eligibility | General factors, even if exact terms depend on application |
| How repayment works | Fixed schedule, percentage of revenue, or tied to transactions |
| What happens after approval | How and when funds actually arrive |
Why Repayment Structure Deserves Its Own Section
How repayment works often matters more to a business owner than how fast they get funded.
A fixed weekly repayment and a revenue-based repayment affect a business’s cash flow completely differently, especially for businesses with seasonal income.
Many lending pages bury this information at the bottom, or leave it for the application process. A page that explains repayment clearly, with a simple example, often does more for conversion than another paragraph about funding speed.
Insurance Tech Pages: Specificity Beats Breadth
Lending pages lose buyers because they leave out important information. Insurance tech pages have the opposite problem.
The Coverage List Problem
Insurance tech product pages often try to show how much they cover. Long lists of scenarios, industries, and risk types.
For a buyer trying to figure out if their specific situation is covered, a long list is harder to use than a short, specific answer.
A Real Scenario: The Wrong Kind of Thorough
An insurance tech company’s product page for small business coverage lists 40 different types of businesses it covers, in alphabetical order.
A bakery owner scans the list, finds “Bakeries” between “Auto Repair” and “Catering,” and moves on without reading anything else about how the coverage actually works for their situation.
A competitor’s page leads with three specific scenarios: a customer slipping on a wet floor, an employee injury during a delivery, and food safety related claims. All three are common bakery scenarios, though the page doesn’t say “bakery” anywhere.
The bakery owner reads all three scenarios, because each one is something they’ve actually thought about.
Why Claims Process Visibility Matters More Here
For insurance tech specifically, what happens when something goes wrong is often the deciding factor.
A buyer evaluating insurance has usually never had a relationship with this company. The biggest unknown in their mind is: if I actually need to use this, what happens.
A section that walks through what filing a claim looks like, how long it typically takes, and what information is needed, addresses this directly. This is one of the few places where describing a process in detail builds more trust than describing an outcome.
| What the Page Should Show | Why |
|---|---|
| What triggers coverage | Buyers need to picture their own situation |
| How a claim gets filed | Removes uncertainty about the process |
| Typical timeline for resolution | Sets realistic expectations |
| What’s explicitly not covered | Prevents a worse experience later |
What Happens After the Buyer Understands the Product
Getting the structure and clarity right solves one problem, but understanding alone doesn’t always lead to action.
The Page’s Job Doesn’t End at “I Understand This”
A product page can do everything right, structure, clarity, real examples, and a buyer can still leave without taking action.
This usually happens when the next step isn’t obvious, or feels like a bigger commitment than the buyer is ready for.
A Real Scenario: The Missing Middle Step
A lending product page clearly explains eligibility, repayment, and funding speed. At the bottom, there’s one button: “Apply Now.”
For a buyer who is still comparing options, “Apply Now” feels premature. Applications often involve documents, time, and sometimes a credit check.
A different version of the page adds a smaller, secondary option: “Check if you qualify” with no commitment implied.
More visitors click this option than the main “Apply Now” button, and a meaningful share of them go on to actually apply, once they’ve already taken a smaller first step.
Matching the Action to Where the Buyer Actually Is
| Buyer’s Mental State | What They’re Ready For |
|---|---|
| Just discovered this category exists | More information, not a form |
| Comparing this against alternatives | A way to check fit without commitment |
| Already decided this looks right | A clear, low-friction next step |
A single “Get Started” button assumes every visitor is in the third group. Most aren’t.
Where the Product Page Sits in the Bigger Picture
A product page doesn’t work in isolation.
By the time someone reaches a payments, lending, or insurance tech product page, they’ve usually arrived through a search, a referral, or content that addressed a broader question first.
The product page’s job is narrow but important. Confirm fit, explain how it works, and make the next step obvious.
Everything else around the site, the content that builds initial awareness, the pages that build trust before someone is ready to buy, exists to get the right person to this page in the first place.
A well-built product page can’t fix a site that doesn’t bring in the right visitors. But a confusing product page can lose a visitor that everything else got right.
