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Backlink audit a practical way to review your backlink profile before buying more links

Backlink audit: what to check before you spend on link building

If rankings are stuck, buying more backlinks can be a waste if the backlink profile has problems. A backlink audit helps you spot risky referring domains, weird anchor text patterns, lost links, and pages that are not earning link equity. This page shows the checks we run, the tools people use, and what “clean next steps” usually look like.

Request an audit Reporting Cleanup and disavow

What a backlink audit is

A backlink audit is a review of your inbound links, the referring domains they come from, and the patterns those links create. The goal is not to chase metrics, it is to understand if the link profile looks natural for your niche and your growth pace. You also want to find links that are helping, links that are neutral, and links that can drag a site down.

The quick checklist

  • Referring domains quality, topic fit, and index status.
  • Anchor text distribution: brand, URL, topical, partial match, exact match.
  • Link attributes: dofollow, nofollow, sponsored, UGC, plus placement type.
  • Lost links, redirected targets, 404s, and broken link equity paths.
Related: high-quality backlinks, referring domains vs backlinks, link attributes.

Tools people use for backlink audits

Most audits start by exporting backlink data, then cross-checking it across more than one source. Every tool misses something, so you want overlap.

Google Search Console

Useful for a baseline “Google sees this” view. Combine with third-party crawlers for deeper sorting, anchor text grouping, and link type patterns.

Ahrefs, Semrush, Majestic

Helpful for backlink discovery, referring domains, anchor text reports, and competitor backlink gap checks. Export data so you can sort by domain topic, traffic signs, and placement type.

Screaming Frog and site crawlers

Great for internal linking, 404 targets, redirect chains, and figuring out whether link equity can flow to your money pages.

Manual review

Nothing replaces clicking into the linking page and reading context. That is where you spot sitewide links, footer links, spun content, and placements that do not fit.

If you are buying links, pair this page with Google link schemes and reporting.

Backlink audit process

This is the same structure we use for client audits. It is built around real SEO signals: relevance, anchor text patterns, link attributes, index status, and link equity flow.

  • Export backlink data from Search Console plus at least one crawler, then merge by canonical URL and root domain.
  • Group anchors: brand, URL, generic, topical, partial match, exact match, then spot ratios that look forced.
  • Review link attributes and placements: dofollow vs nofollow, sponsored, UGC, in-content, author bio, sitewide.
  • Check target URLs: do links point to the right page, are there redirects, 404s, or irrelevant targets?
  • Flag risks: link networks, malware, spun content, de-indexed domains, anchor spikes, unnatural link velocity.
Deep dives: anchor text strategy, link velocity, referring domains vs backlinks.

What you get after an audit

The goal is a clear plan you can execute. That plan usually includes cleanup priorities, link building targets, and a safer anchor approach.

Risk list with notes

A list of risky domains and URLs, plus why they look risky. This is what supports cleanup planning and disavow decisions.

Anchor mix direction

A target anchor text mix by intent: brand and URL anchors for safety, topical anchors for relevance, partial match anchors where it fits naturally.

Competitor backlink gap targets

A shortlist of competitor referring domains that fit your topic and can be approached with outreach, guest posts, or PR. See competitor backlinks.

Next steps plan

A practical plan tied to your pages: what to clean, what to rebuild, which link types to use, and a reasonable monthly pace. Start with packages or request manual outreach.

Send your URL See packages Reporting

FAQ

A few common questions people ask before they request an audit.

Do I need a disavow file?
Not always. Disavow is usually a last step when you have a real pattern of spammy links, a manual action, or a clear history of paid link blasts. If you are unsure, start with manual actions and cleanup.
How long does a backlink audit take?
It depends on backlink count and how deep you want the review to go. A quick audit can focus on patterns and obvious risks. A deeper audit includes link context checks and cleanup planning.
What if my links look “fine” but rankings still do not move?
Then the bottleneck may be on-page intent match, internal linking, or a stronger competitor set. Links help most when your page already answers the query well and you are building relevant referring domains over time. See how many backlinks do I need.
Request a backlink audit Quality checks Choose an agency

On this page

Jump to the audit parts.

What an audit is › Tools and data › Audit process › What you get › FAQ ›

Pair the audit with link building

After the audit, we usually pick one core route: manual outreach, guest posts, niche edits, or a package that matches your SERP competition.

Packages Outreach
Related: anchor text, link velocity, reporting.

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