Backlinks boost your search engine rank by demonstrating your site’s credibility.
With our free backlink tool, get an overview of the websites linking to your domain and those of your closest competitors.
Powered by Semrush’s database of 43 trillion backlinks, this tool provides valuable insights for your link-building strategy.
Our firsthand experience at Backlinko.com is a testament to the impact of helpful and unique content as a backlink growth engine.
Using the backlink analysis tool, you can see Backlinko.com has earned 2.2 million backlinks from over 69.4K unique domains.
In this guide, you’ll learn what backlinks are and how to use the free tool to find them.
Then when you’re ready to start link building, we show you how to evaluate backlinks. This ensures you have enough high-quality ones to help your pages rank.
What are Backlinks?
Backlinks—high-quality ones, push your content ahead of others in the search results.
But that’s not all. Good backlinks bring the right type of audience to your content.
What is meant by high-quality backlinks?
We’ll get to that soon enough. But if you already know what a backlink is, .
A backlink is when a website (e.g., Backlinko) links to another website (e.g., Semrush) through a hyperlink.
For example, here is a high-quality link from Hubspot to Backlinko.
Because the link from Hubspot points directly to a page on Backlinko, it’s called a “backlink.”
More importantly, this is a high-quality backlink because Hubspot is a well-known company that has consistently published expert content. This makes their link to Backlinko count more because Hubspot has authority and reputation.
The backlink from Hubspot is a strong vote of confidence in Backlinko which can improve search rankings for the target URL.
But not all backlinks will help with keyword rankings—only high-quality or highly relevant backlinks will move the needle.
For example, backlinks can be marked as “nofollow,” “sponsored” or “UGC”. Having these attributes on your backlinks isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but they will do little to improve search rankings.
This doesn’t mean they’re useless as these backlinks can still bring visibility, brand awareness, and referral traffic.
This is a good segway to get a few things straight.
There’s no such thing as a “dofollow” backlink—this is simply a term SEO tools created.
There are only “nofollow,” “sponsored,” “UGC,” and everything else that has not been marked as these three attributes.
Confused?
Don’t worry, let’s fix that right now.
What Are Nofollow, Sponsored, and UGC Backlinks?
Nofollow links are links with a rel=”nofollow” HTML tag applied to them. The nofollow tag tells search engines to ignore that link.
You can usually tell if a backlink is nofollow by looking at the page source (HTML).
This means that nofollow links aren’t supposed to pass PageRank, hence, they should not impact search engine rankings.
But here’s the thing.
Contrary to popular opinion, nofollow links can directly help with your search rankings.
And when placed on a high-traffic page, a nofollow link will most likely bring you substantial referral traffic.
Nofollow links are fine as long as not all your inbound backlinks are nofollow links.
In fact, we’ve covered this topic in detail over here, “What Is a Nofollow Link? Here’s A Simple Plain English Answer.”
So what’s the deal with sponsored and UGC links?
Without writing an essay, they fall into the same bucket as nofollow links.
A well-placed backlink flagged as sponsored, or UGC can assist your marketing goals. But it will not necessarily push your content higher in SERP rankings.
If there’s one takeaway from this, it’s that every backlink type and classification has its place in your SEO roadmap.
However, a word of caution.
Don’t overdo pursuing only backlinks that someone on the Internet says will help your content rank better.
You still need helpful and unique content.
You still need to understand your audience’s search intent and the problem they hope to solve.
You still need a way to move visitors along their journey once they land on your content.
Why Backlinks Are Important for SEO
There are three primary reasons why backlinks are critical for SEO success:
- They provide a vote of confidence in your website
- They improve search rankings
- They drive referral traffic to your content
1. Provide a Vote of Confidence in Your Site
Each backlink you get from an authoritative and trusted website is a vote of confidence in your content.
Google treats relevant backlinks as an endorsement that your site is valuable. So much so that backlinks are a part of Google E-E-A-T, specifically, authoritativeness.
This is why getting backlinks from relevant websites is important for SEO. Each of them provides you with a boost in the credibility and reliability of the information presented.
And this explains why top-ranking content tends to have more backlinks than results further down the page.
This isn’t a coincidence because backlinks are part of Google’s ranking system.
2. Improve Search Rankings
There’s a strong reason why link building still matters.
Take the following visual, for example.
The first organic result on Google has an average CTR of 27.6%.
This means your content is 10x more likely to get engagement when it ranks #1 than if it were in 10th position.
As a website owner, you want your target audience to land on your content.
And in order to do so, (in addition to keyword research and optimizing for featured snippets) your content needs backlinks.
Top-ranking pages have more backlinks than lower-ranking pages.
The data tells a clear story—backlinks improve search rankings by building upon strong foundations of technical SEO and on-page SEO.
And backlinks are the only way trust can be measured in Google’s E-E-A-T framework found in its Quality Raters Guide.
3. Drive Referral Traffic to Your Site
Search ranking is just one way to increase traffic to your content, services, or products.
Referral traffic is another.
And the beauty of quality backlinks is that they can bring relevant and qualified visitors to you.
Even when the backlink has a nofollow or sponsored attribute.
How to Analyze Your Site’s Backlinks For Free
If you haven’t already done so, put your website’s URL in the above tool.
You can choose from three options:
- *.domain.com/*: the tool will gather all known backlinks across the entire website, including subdomains
- domain.com/*: the tool with gather all known backlinks on the root domain
- URL: the tool will analyze the exact path you’ve provided an nothing else on the website
For the most comprehensive result, use *.domain.com/* so you may capture any inbound links that may have linked to your site with or without -www.
You’ll then see a row of key metrics and a table of individual backlinks.
This is what it all means:
- Authority Score: proprietary metric used to represent the level of trust of your website
- Total Referring Domains: total number of unique websites linking to your website
- Backlinks: total number of individual backlinks the tool has found for your website
- Referring IPs: total number of unique IP addresses linking to your website
- Backlink: source of your website’s backlinks provided as a full URL
- Anchor Text: text used to link from the source of the backlink to your website
- Follow: indicates if a nofollow, UGC, or sponsored attribute has been applied
- Score: level of trust of the referring domain
So how do you use all this information?
First things first, you see some backlinks shown for your website, right?
This is a good start—but what are these links, where do they come from, and are they any good?
That’s what you’re going to find out.
Scroll down to the table, where you’ll find a column labeled Backlink.
This is where the top backlinks to your website are displayed.
You’ll notice two lines per row.
- The first URL (in blue) is the source of your backlink,which is showing who has linked to you
- The second line is where they’ve linked to on your website
So now you know the source, the exact location where it has linked to you, and where they’ve linked to your content.
But in what context have you been linked to?
Ah, this is what the Anchor text column reveals.
Anchor text is the clickable text section of a hyperlink.
As it turns out, Google uses anchor text as a ranking signal.
So when you look at your backlinks, the anchor text gives you an indication of the vote in confidence you’ve received.
This may be a vote of confidence in your brand name (e.g., “backlinko”).
Or better yet, a vote of confidence in what you do, sell, or know (e.g., “HVAC technician”, “smart doorlock”, “study by Backlinko”).
Now, if ranking for keywords is important to you, you’re going to pay a lot of attention to the Follow column.
The Follow column tells you how they’ve linked to you.
Green signals the backlink will help in some way with your content ranking. Whereas gray tells you the backlink has minimal impact on search rankings.
But remember, not all backlinks are created equal.
This is why the tool includes a Score column to help you identify dofollow backlinks from trusted websites.
But what if you didn’t see any backlinks shown?
First, don’t panic.
Go back to the tool and make sure you have put in the correct URL.
Second, select *.domain.com/* from the drop-down.
If you still don’t see any backlinks shown, this can be for a few reasons:
- Your website is relatively new
- Your website may be blocking SEO tool crawlers in its robots.txt
By the way, the free backlink checker will show you the top backlinks.
To see a full list of all your backlinks, click View All Backlinks.
Doing so will navigate you to Semrush Backlink Analytics, where you can pull 10 requests in total (per day).
How to Analyze Your Competitor’s Backlinks
Use the free backlink checker to reverse engineer what’s working for your competitors.
You may do this in two ways:
- Taking a peek behind the curtains across the entire website, or
- Laser focusing on one specific URL
Site-Wide Analysis
Start by pasting the homepage URL of a competitor into the tool.
Make sure you’ve selected *.domain.com/* from the drop-down and click on Analyze.
The tool will show you the top backlinks your competitor has. And it will do so by displaying backlinks from websites with the highest trust.
At a high level, this information will give you an overall idea:
- Who has linked to your competitor (Backlink column, row 1) and their authority score
- Where they’ve linked from (Backlink column, row 1)
- Where they’ve linked to (Backlink column, row 2)
- The context in which they’ve linked to your competitor (Anchor text column)
- How they’ve linked to them (Follow column)
Now you have evidence your competitors have been active with outreach and link building. It’s time to deep dive into the specifics of their backlink strategy.
For this, you’ll use the URL feature to inspect individual content paths.
Specific URL Analysis
In the previous screenshot you can see Ahrefs ecommerce product page SEO guide has attracted a number of links.
Grab the URL and paste it into the Free Backlink Checker.
Next, select “URL” from the dropdown and run the analysis.
At first glance, you’ll see how many unique websites are linking to the guide.
There are 63 unique referring domains sending 139 backlinks to the content. Plus, many aren’t nofollow or sponsored links.
This tells you some websites are linking to the guide more than once.
More importantly, it’s likely these 63 websites will also link to you.
All you have to do is work out the how and why.
Alternatively, Google one of your priority keywords to get a view of who your ranking competitors are.
Then do the same process from one competitor to another. Find the type of links your competitors have and how you can replicate their success.
For example, the keyword “backlink checker” reveals Ahrefs, Semrush, and Neil Patel as SERP competitors.
Taking the Neil Patel URL and putting it into the free backlink checker, you can see the top URLs linking to them.
You’ll notice a number of things:
- Overuse of exact match keyword in their anchor text
- A mixture of nofollow and non-nofollow backlinks
- Not many trusted sites are linking to them
- But their URL has a lot of backlinks from 1000 unique websites
If you want more granular information and a full list of a competitor’s backlinks, you’ll need a Semrush subscription (click here to start your 7-day trial).
Semrush will provide you with a breakdown of follow and nofollow backlinks and backlink types.
Why You Should Analyze Your Competitors Backlinks
There are three reasons to review your competitors backlink profile:
- To see what content is popular
- To understand why their content is being linked to
- To reverse engineer how they’re getting links
Let’s break this down.
See What Type of Content Is Popular
People link to another website only if it helps their story or benefits their audience.
When you see many websites refer to the same URL on your competitor’s site, it’s a telling sign.
It’s a sign that their content is considered valuable.
As a result, you may target the same keyword and search intent.
See Why Their Content Has Been Linked To
Now that you know what content has gotten backlinks and who has linked to them, your job is to figure out why.
What did your competitor do right to grab the attention of the author?
- Was it a particular angle or perspective that was contrary to mainstream opinion?
- Did they present first-hand data?
- Did they provide commentary, and was this quoted by the referring website?
Understanding the motivation to share a link to competing pages will is useful intel. It will help you add elements to your content that are more likely to attract links.
Reverse Engineer How Their Content Was Linked To
The content type and anchor text can be very revealing and help inform your next steps.
Did the link originate from a guest post?
If so, can you pitch an engaging topic to the referring domain?
Was it a link to their homepage?
If so, do you have resources for a digital PR or a Help a Reporter Out campaign?
Did the link point to a study that your competitor published?
If so, can you do something similar?
What Is Considered a Good Backlink?
The measure of a good backlink comes down to six factors:
- The authority of the referring domain
- Its relevance to your content
- How naturally the backlink fits within the content
- Its placement within the content
- The choice of anchor text
- The use of nofollow or dofollow tags
Authority
Generally speaking, a link from a site like The New York Times will carry far more weight than an unknown blogger.
This is why links from high-authority pages impact rankings more than links from low-authority pages.
Unfortunately, Google no longer discloses the perceived authority of a website. But third-party tools such as Ahrefs, Moz Pro, Majestic, and Semrush offer their own proxies.
For example, Semrush uses the Authority Score (AS), whereas Ahrefs refers to Domain Rating (DR) and Moz created Domain Authority (DA).
You can check the authority of any website with Backlinko’s free website authority tool.
And our free backlink checker provides Semrush scores for all the backlinks it finds.
Again, these are purely proxies—Google doesn’t use them. Google has its own way of calculating PageRank and domain authority.
Instead, use the number as one factor of many when evaluating a backlink.
A link originating from a website with high authority score doesn’t necessarily make it good.
Similarly, a link from a website with low authority score doesn’t automatically disqualify it as being good.
Why?
Well, there’s this concept of relevance.
Relevance
A backlink is considered relevant when it comes from a website that is related to your industry or niche.
To put it simply, a link from a direct competitor is probably going to be the best backlink you can get for your website.
This is because your competitor operates in the same industry and probably is going after the same audience and search queries.
This makes them highly relevant in Google’s eyes.
But landing a link from a competitor is extremely difficult.
Therefore, what other websites could be viewed as being relevant to your content?
In his article for Search Engine Land, Brad Smith proposes an interesting framework titled “The 5 Degrees of Link Relevance.”
Since getting a backlink from a direct competitor is unlikely and paying for inclusion can be cost-prohibitive, Brad suggests other varying types of relevant websites.
In short, a high-quality backlink comes from a topically relevant or audience-relevant website.
For instance, if you’re an affiliate website promoting smart home technology products, a topical relevant website would be the manufacturer of smart home products.
And an audience-relevant website could be one that covers informational topics on smart home products—even a niche website monetized by display ads.
But avoid low-trust and irrelevant websites even when they have attractive authority metrics.
Natural vs Unnatural
SEOs have long tried to manipulate Google search rankings, and backlinks are a known ranking signal.
So much so Google considers unnatural links a violation of their guidelines.
A good backlink is one that looks natural. That is, it doesn’t stand out.
What does this mean?
You want your reader to notice the backlink, but not because it seems off. But rather, a good backlink uses anchor text that reflects the tone and usual language of the author.
Because when it doesn’t, the link can send the wrong message. Instead of trust and curiosity to learn more, a user can be pushed away.
And search engines can probably spot the pattern and devalue the backlink anyway.
Link Position
A good backlink will come from the main body of the referring page.
This is because your link’s position on a page is important.
For example, a backlink on a user’s forum signature will carry little weight. Just as a footer link or site-wide sidebar link will have no impact on your search rankings.
But above all else, it needs to make sense otherwise, it will stand out like a sore thumb. Especially if you’re using aggressive exact-match keywords as the anchor text.
Anchor Text
A good backlink uses anchor text that makes the reader want to click on it.
The above screenshot is an example of a typical optimized-for-search anchor text.
While it may help with boosting ranking signals to your target page, it lacks any real reason for someone to click on it.
Instead of relying on generic phrases stuffed with keywords, craft anchor text that:
- Provides clear context about the linked content
- Piques the reader’s interest or curiosity
- Demonstrates value they’ll gain by clicking
Link Attribute
As mentioned earlier, rel=”nofollow” is a tag added to a link that tells search engines: “Don’t count this link as an endorsement.”
A good backlink, if ranking is your ultimate goal, will not have a nofollow, sponsored, or UGC tag.
However, if the referring page is highly relevant and will attract a high volume of relevant visitors, a nofollow, sponsored, or UGC backlink is absolutely fine because of the potential referral traffic it’ll attract.
How to Get High-Quality Backlinks
Now that you’ve seen what the competition is doing compared to your own efforts, the next step is to develop a plan to get those links.
One strategy that always attracts links from big publications is creating what Backlinko’s founder Brian Dean calls “be the source” content. This is one of seven proven strategies in our guide to earning high-quality backlinks.