The Backlinks report shows you all the backlinks pointing to a domain, URL, or subsection.

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Here are some actionable use cases for this report.

See all your competitor’s backlinks

Enter a competitor’s website to see all their backlinks.

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The page that the website is linking from (linking page) resides under the Referring page column (1) and the page that it links to (destination page) resides under the Anchor and target URL column (2).

You can also see view historical backlinks via the Show history dropdown.

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From here, we can apply all sorts of filters for different use cases.

See how many dofollow (followed) links your competitor has

Filter by link attribute and see all Dofollow links pointing to your target.

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Dofollow links are important because they pass link equity to the destination page, which is one Google’s most important ranking factors.

Alternatively, you can filter by other link attributes such as:

  • Nofollow - Instructs search engines to not follow the link, hence does not pass link equity.

  • UGC - Shows that a link is placed in user-generated content (like comments and forum posts).

  • Sponsored - Shows that a link is an ad, paid placement, sponsorship, or affiliate link.

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See only the "high-impact" links pointing at your competitor's pages

In general, high-impact links (also called “authoritative links” or “high-quality links”) are links with consistent traffic AND authority. You can target them by setting these filters:

  • Domain traffic

  • DR

  • Exclude subdomains

In our example, we’re looking at followed links from domains with a minimum DR value of 30, which generate at least 1,000 organic visits/month.

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This should likely filter out most spammy and low-quality backlinks pointing at your competitor's website. From here, you can reverse engineer how your competitor has acquired links.


NOTE

Applying these filters can filter out some perfectly good websites that currently do not drive consistent traffic.

Feel free to play with those filters until you are satisfied with the results you get.


See if your competition is proactively building links

Spot newly built backlinks by setting these filters:

  • Backlinks tab: New

  • Show history: Last 30 days

  • Status: Newly published/Link added

This will help you differentiate between new links that were added together with the page or to an already existing page.

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TIP

Set the Status to Link restored to see if a competitor is doing link reclamation. This will help you identify links that were lost, but then restored again.

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Figure out why your website lost links

Check the reason why your website lost links.

For example, if we set the Status dropdown to Noindex, we'll see backlinks from referring pages that are not indexed by Google. Such backlinks don't pass any link equity.

Usually, a noindex tag is used for specific reasons, like preventing search engines from crawling staging environments. Not removing it when pushed into production is a common accident.

If you see this might be the case, reach out to the webmaster to inform them about it.

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Build links for your website with images

If you’ve created unique images for your website (charts, graphs, infographics, etc.), chances are people are linking to them and not to the pages where they were initially featured.

Search for .PNG or .JPG in the Target URL to find and claim improper attributions.

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Search competitor link profiles for specific link opportunities

Use the search to include or exclude backlinks with certain words or phrases in the:

  • Domain name

  • Referring page title

  • Referring page URL

  • Anchor

  • Anchor with surrounding text

  • Target URL

This is useful for mining specific link opportunities from your competitor's link profiles. Let’s go through a few use cases below.

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Find resources to get listed on

Resource pages are lists of curated useful industry resources, such as articles or tools.

Search for words like “resources” or “links” in the Referring page URLs to find resource pages from which your competitor has links.

If the website has listed your competitor as a resource, chances are they might want to list you too.

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Learn more in this video.

Find podcasts to get interviewed on

Search for words like “podcast”, “episode”, “interview” in the Referring page title and/or Referring page URL to find podcasts to be interviewed for.

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Learn more in this video.

Find guest posting opportunities

Search for words like “guest post” or “written by” in the Anchors or the Anchor surrounding text to find guest post opportunities.

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About this course

How to use Ahrefs

64 lessons
3h 24m
Learn practical ways to use Ahrefs' SEO tools and reports to improve SEO.

What you’ll learn

  • How to analyze yours and your competitors’ websites with Site Explorer

  • How to master keyword research with Keywords Explorer

  • How to improve your on-page and technical SEO with Site Audit

  • How to track and improve your Google rankings with Rank Tracker

  • How to discover untapped keyword and link building opportunities with Content Explorer

  • How to get keyword and link building opportunities on autopilot with Alerts

Course by

Andrei ȚițAndrei Țiț is a product marketer at Ahrefs. He develops content to help you make the most out of Ahrefs.
Sam OhSam Oh is VP of Marketing at Ahrefs. He incorporates his commitment to education and love for entrepreneurship into actionable and easy-to-digest tutorials.