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Modern brass bathroom sink faucet on marble countertop with white subway tile backsplash
UPDATED DEC 2024

100+ Brands Featured

Screwfix logo in dark blue sans-serif font
ToolStation logo in dark blue with rounded rectangle border
Wickes home improvement retailer logo
Plumb World logo featuring plumbing pipes icon and Big brands small prices tagline
Big Bathroom Shop logo with water droplet icon
Victorian Plumbing logo with blue checkmark
City Plumbing logo featuring dark blue curved pipe design
Best Heating logo with radiator icon and domain name
Radiator Outlet logo with stylized radiator fins icon and affordable radiators tagline
Stelrad heating solutions logo
100+

Brands Ranked

69

Pages

9,800

Keywords

10

Min Read


Which trade plumbing brands have the strongest brand awareness in the UK?

Brand demand + owned social reach (UK)

Rank Brand Monthly brand searches Owned Social Score
1 Screwfix 5,000,000 915
2 Wickes 1,500,000 648
3 Toolstation 1,830,000 382
4 Victorian Plumbing 246,000 271
5 Plumbworld 49,500 181
6 City Plumbing 110,000 69
7 Bradfords 165,000 43
8 Easy Bathrooms 33,100 188
9 TradePoint 14,800 324
10 Huws Gray 49,500 46

What the table shows: Brand recall is still concentrated at the top. Screwfix remains the name most buyers type, outperforming the rest significantly. Toolstation and Wickes sit in a strong second tier, but there’s a steep drop to specialist or regional players such as Plumbworld, City Plumbing and Bradfords.

Note the outlier: Easy Bathrooms has modest brand searches yet a comparatively healthy owned-social score, suggesting campaigns that drive conversation even if they don’t always translate to navigational queries.

Why it matters: High branded search doesn’t just inflate traffic; it changes how every channel performs. Buyers who already know you convert faster and tolerate fewer clicks. In the era of AI answers, brand recall also increases the chance your name appears in the text of responses, not just as a buried source link.

For the mid-pack, this means building recognisable, expert content around high-intent projects, and amplifying that content with digital PR so you’re present when buyers search by problem, not by brand.


Who dominates organic search visibility right now?

Organic visibility snapshot (Traffic Score, Sep 2025 vs Sep 2024)

Rank Brand Traffic Score (Sep 2025) Traffic Score (Sep 2024) YoY
1 Screwfix 8,168,507 6,724,684 +21%
2 Wickes 4,116,375 1,975,926 +108%
3 Toolstation 2,777,645 2,675,658 +4%
4 Victorian Plumbing 294,527 156,346 +88%
5 Plumbworld 281,269 241,122 +17%
6 City Plumbing 122,230 126,196 −3%
7 Big Bathroom Shop 118,937 160,423 −26%
8 TradePoint 108,123 91,282 +18%
9 Bathroom Mountain 105,778 68,403 +55%
10 Stelrad 105,099 93,724 +12%

What the table shows: Screwfix still owns the biggest share of organic demand, but the standout story is Wickes doubling its traffic score year-on-year. Toolstation holds steady, Victorian Plumbing surges within its niche, and Plumbworld edges forward. The long tail is volatile: Big Bathroom Shop shrinks; Bathroom Mountain accelerates from a smaller base, hinting at gains in specific category clusters.

Key insight: If your YoY curve is flat while the market is rising, you’re losing share. Traditional SEO remains the engine for revenue.

The winners aren’t just ranking for head terms; they’re broad across thousands of query variants that map to jobs, parts, sizing, and compatibility questions.

The data suggests two levers:

  1. Expand structured category content that reflects how tradespeople actually filter and compare options.
  2. Publish definitive reference resources (compatibility tables, calculators, spec explainers) that pick up links and lock in long-tail rankings. This kind of content feeds AI systems with trustworthy context.

Want to turn category depth and reference content into measurable growth? Learn more about our e-commerce SEO services.


Visibility vs authority: who’s punching above their weight?

The quadrant view tells you where technical foundations, content depth and link equity are out of balance:

  • AHigh traffic, high authority — market leaders combining strong link profiles with broad visibility. Think Screwfix and, increasingly, Wickes. If you’re competing, assume you’ll need non-linear moves, like owned data tools, distinctive formats, or community assets.
  • BHigh traffic, low authority — overachievers whose technical setup and content quality carry a lighter link graph. There’s headroom here: targeted digital PR could harden rankings that currently ride on content alone.
  • CLow traffic, high authority — the “sleeping giants.” Good link equity, weaker visibility. This often signals crawl/indexation inefficiencies, thin category frameworks, or legacy IA. Fix the foundations, and you unlock disproportionate gains.
  • DLow traffic, low authority — early-stage or under-invested brands. Here, momentum comes from focus: pick a few projects/products and build the best resources on the web around them.

If your brand searches are high but traffic is low, you’re leaving generic demand on the table; if traffic is high but brand searches are light, digital PR and brand activity should raise navigational demand and improve your AI name-check rate.

See the full quadrant visualisation with all 30+ brands plotted in the full report.

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How are brands showing up in AI-generated answers?

AI visibility at a glance (multi-platform)

Brand AI Share of Voice (all platforms) Google AI Overviews (SGE) SoV ChatGPT mention rate Bing AI mode SoV AI citations (approx.) Topics where brand is named
Screwfix ~50% ~62% ~32% ~50% ~9,000 (incl. forum >6,000) 285
Wickes ~26% ~17.5% ~25% ~34% ~1,200 ~159
Toolstation ~21% ~6% ~28% ~30% ~652 ~83
Victorian Plumbing ~12% ~9% ~20% ~8% ~1,234 ~73
Plumbworld ~7% ~7% low low ~1,300 0 (cited, rarely named)
City Plumbing low very low very low very low ~135 few
Bradfords minimal minimal minimal minimal ~56 few
Easy Bathrooms minimal minimal minimal minimal 28 few

What the table shows: AI answers magnify brand separation. Screwfix isn’t just cited; it’s named. The Screwfix Community forum is a heavyweight information source, creating a flywheel where forum Q&A fuels citations which reinforce future mentions.

Wickes outperforms its SEO rank in AI formats, likely due to their guide-style content. Whereas Toolstation under-indexes in generative answers compared with its organic footprint. It’s strong for product queries, lighter on community or evergreen how-to content that LLMs love to quote.

Why it matters: Being the link behind an AI answer is useful; being the brand named in the wording is better. Name-checks drive memory and future navigational searches.

To shift from “cited” to “credited,” brands may need assets LLMs can confidently summarise, such as project walkthroughs, troubleshooting trees, calculators and glossaries. UGC hubs (forums, pro-tips archives) are particularly powerful in trades where edge-case detail matters.

Expect AI platforms to favour broad topic coverage and a consistent, helpful tone as they refine for safety and user trust. Read more about AI SEO and how to optimise for generative search.

📊 Want the complete AI visibility breakdown?
The full report includes citation counts, topic coverage maps, and platform-by-platform analysis for all 30+ brands.

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Brand and product trends to watch in the trade plumbing industry

Emerging products

search demand

Query UK monthly searches Trend
column radiator 18,100 +6%
thermostatic rad valves 14,800 +8%
tall radiators 12,100 +7%
electric radiators wall mounted 6,600 +15%
pan connector for toilet 2,900 +24%
toilet flushing mechanism 1,900 +44%
brushed brass radiator 1,000 +36%
22mm copper pipe 3m 880 +30%

Receding products

search demand

Query UK monthly searches Trend
plumbing 74,000 −18%
vertical radiators 27,100 −18%
plumbing supply 14,800 −28%
electric towel rail 12,100 −18%
radiator grey 6,600 −24%

Emerging brands

brand queries

Brand UK monthly searches Trend
City Plumbing 110,000 +15%
Plumbworld 49,500 +22%
Easy Bathrooms 33,100 +39%
Bathroom Mountain 33,100 +31%
Builder Depot 27,100 +15%

Receding brands

brand queries

Brand UK monthly searches Trend
Bradfords 165,000 −6%
BestHeating 18,100 −13%
TradePoint 14,800 −13%
Mr Central Heating 14,800 −18%
QS Supplies 8,100 −13%

What the tables show: Demand is clustering around practical efficiency and finish choices (thermostatic control, brushed brass, specific pipe sizes), while some generic or fashion-led terms fade. City Plumbing pushes up in navigational interest, and mid-tier specialists like Plumbworld and Easy Bathrooms trend positively.

Action point: Category pages that reflect how trades buy, such as by size, connection type, finish, heat output, win. Brands seeing uplift tend to have clear, filterable ranges and guides that resolve compatibility doubts.

Where demand is receding, assume higher competition for fewer clicks; your content must do more work per visit. Map this to generational patterns: younger DIYers and first-time buyers search with “what is/how to/size for” queries, while trade pros pivot quickly to product codes and parts. Content strategy and on-page UX should serve both modes.

The tables above show a snapshot. The full report contains the complete keyword opportunity matrix with search volumes, difficulty scores, and seasonal trends for 200+ product and brand queries.

Download The Full Data Set


Which plumbing sites earn the most trust through reviews?

Review profile (selected high-volume sites)

Site Reviews (count) Review score
Bathroom Mountain 542,927 4.5
Victorian Plumbing 411,582 4.7
Plumbworld 69,997 4.5
BestHeating 65,531 4.6
Wickes 61,066 4.7
ShowerSpares 57,239 4.6
HeatandPlumb 25,658 4.6
JT Atkinson 13,606 4.9

Why it matters: Reviews uplift click-through rates and time-on-page, two behaviours that correlate with conversion and with the kind of engagement AI systems interpret as helpful.

Embed review signals in the right places: PLPs, PDPs, and supporting content, to let buyers validate choices without pogo-sticking. Responding to negatives quickly also protects your brand’s AI footprint; LLMs increasingly surface tone and resolution in their synthesis of review content.


Page speed: why seconds still matter in trades

Core web vitals put what trade buyers feel in numbers: slow, jumpy pages burn daylight. In this sector, many sessions begin on mobile, often on-site or on the way to a branch.

Lightweight templates, compressed imagery for product detail, and stable PLP grids reduce frustration and lower abandonment. Faster sites tend to rank better, but the bigger effect shows up in conversion. Plus, AI models favour sources that load reliably and structure information clearly.

Where to focus:

  • LCP: Keep the biggest content element on each template lean and visible.
  • CLS: Make filters instant and predictable; avoid layout shifts that push results down.
  • INP: Ensure interactive controls appear responsive even when data calls run.

The brands that take speed seriously unlock compounding gains across SEO, CRO and AI citation likelihood.

Need a technical health check? Explore our technical SEO services.


Interpreting the wider pattern: how behaviour is evolving

  • Jobs-to-be-done beats brand loyalty at the point of need. Even loyal Screwfix and Toolstation customers search tasks and parts first. Brands that pre-empt these queries with precise, visual explainers capture intent early.
  • AI is normalising “list answers”. When ChatGPT or SGE lists Screwfix, Wickes and Toolstation together, it compresses perceived differentiation. That places more weight on what your brand is known for (community help, calculators, next-day availability) rather than what you stock.
  • Generational split is widening. Younger DIYers and first-time buyers want step-by-step content and rapid validation via reviews; seasoned trades lean on product codes, spec sheets and peer tips. A single page often has to serve both.
  • Local fulfilment still matters. Click-and-collect and branch stock visibility influence rankings indirectly through behaviour signals. When buyers don’t bounce, you win.

Strategic takeaways

  1. Move from parts lists to proof. If you’re Toolstation or City Plumbing, pair catalogue depth with unmissable proof assets like compatibility tables, BTU calculators, wiring diagrams, and “will-it-fit?” decision trees. These are magnets for links and AI citations.
  2. Turn “cited” into “credited.” Brands like Plumbworld are heavily cited but rarely named in answers. Bridge that gap by putting your brand name and expertise into the content itself. Think named expert quotes, author bios, and community round-ups that AI will carry verbatim.
  3. Double down on project language. Wickes’ uplift suggests guide-led content travels well across SEO and AI. Structure projects around inputs (room size, heat output, water pressure) and outcomes (noise, finish, installation time) so models can safely summarise you.
  4. Defend head terms, grow the long tail. Screwfix has the head term; challengers can out-ship on long-tail clarity. Standardise faceted copy and FAQs so every combination a buyer actually uses returns a helpful page.
  5. Make review signals work harder. Surface the most informative reviews, not just the newest. Highlight use-cases (“installer-friendly”, “quiet pump”, “fits Victorian soil pipe”) to feed both buyers and AI prompts.

Ready to benchmark your brand against the competition?

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Spotlight: how Screwfix turns community knowledge into AI authority

When people talk about authority, they often mean links. In trades, the richer signal is solved problems.

The Screwfix community forum offers thousands of real-world fixes, workarounds and brand-agnostic tips. That gives AI models a dense, trustworthy corpus to draw from. It also means the brand is helpful at the moment of need, not just visible in a product listing.

What makes that corpus unusually powerful is breadth. Questions span electrical, heating, fixings, bathrooms, compliance, and building control; answers are short, specific and experience-led. That pattern is easy for models to summarise safely. It’s why Screwfix doesn’t just get cited, it gets named in answers across many topics.

Name-checks matter: they drive memory and future navigational searches, which in turn lift organic performance.

There’s a structural point here. Forums and help hubs create a persistent surface area for long-tail intent. Threads attract links from blogs and social groups; they also generate a cadence of fresh engagement that keeps content current. That combination nudges both classic ranking systems and AI ranking heuristics.

Two enablers tend to separate useful UGC from noise: moderation and structure. Moderation keeps advice civil, legal and safe; structure makes content scannable through the use of clear titles, accepted answers, and linkable snippets. Screwfix benefits from both. The knock-on effect is visible in AI share of voice: when a model must pick sources it can defend, a well-moderated, well-structured archive is a low-risk choice.

Could others replicate this? Yes, but only if the community serves jobs-to-be-done, not just product talk. A focused “Pro Tips” hub, searchable by task, material and fitting type, can deliver similar dividends. Pair that with a help centre that reads like a library, with spec explainers, sizing guides and compatibility lookups, and you create overlapping assets that search engines and models can trust.

Finally, consider generational behaviour. Younger buyers want fast validation and visuals. Seasoned trades want certainty and part codes. A forum thread with a labelled diagram, a brief bill of materials and a safety caveat satisfies both. Brands that ship those elements consistently will see their content reused in AI answers and recalled by buyers.


What we’ll be watching throughout 2025

  • AI answer stability. Expect more variability in what SGE shows from week to week. Brands with broad, evergreen help hubs will ride the bumps better than those reliant on a handful of high-value URLs.
  • Branch-aware UX. More sites will expose local stock and same-day collection at the category level. That reduces bounce rates and strengthens both SEO and AI trust signals.
  • Spec literacy. Content that explains equivalence and compatibility between parts (e.g., thread types, copper sizes, valve formats) will gather links and citations because it solves costly mistakes.
  • UGC you can trust. Moderated, searchable community content, like the Screwfix forum model, will spread beyond the biggest players as brands look for persistent advantages in AI visibility.

Method note: Traffic Score is an Ahrefs-derived estimate for relative visibility across ranking keywords. It’s not a replacement for analytics, but it’s ideal for market comparison. AI visibility metrics reflect captured impressions and citations across SGE, ChatGPT and Bing’s AI mode at the time of collection.


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