Infographic link building is the practice of creating visual content assets that attract backlinks from publishers, bloggers, and journalists who embed or link to them from their own sites. Infographics attract links because they make complex data easy to digest and share, giving editors something genuinely useful to offer their readers. The tactic works best when the infographic presents original or well-curated data, targets a specific proven topic, and is paired with a deliberate outreach campaign rather than left to earn links passively. This guide covers the 7 infographic formats used for link building, how to research a topic and source data, the design principles that make infographics worth linking to, the step-by-step outreach process, and where to submit infographics for broader distribution.
- Infographics attract links because they give publishers a ready-made visual that adds value for their readers. In 2026 the bar is high: design quality and data originality both matter
- Statistical and list infographics generate the most backlinks because they produce citable data and easily referenced collections
- Topic selection drives campaign success more than design. Validate your concept against existing high-performing infographics in your niche before spending on design
- Passive distribution alone rarely produces significant links. Targeted email outreach is the primary driver of placements at scale
- Original or freshly compiled data is the single strongest differentiator between infographics that earn dozens of links and those that earn none
Why Infographics Work for Link Building
Infographics attract backlinks for a structural reason that most other content formats cannot match: they give editors and publishers something ready-made. A blogger covering your topic can embed your infographic in seconds, providing their readers with a polished visual that improves the quality of their own content without requiring any additional production work. That ease of use is a direct driver of link acquisition.
The data on infographic performance is consistent across multiple studies. Content that includes original graphics attracts significantly more backlinks than text-only content, with figures typically cited at 150 to 178% more inbound links. Social media posts with visual content generate engagement rates several times higher than text equivalents. Readers are substantially more likely to read and retain content presented visually than in plain text. For link building purposes, what matters most is that infographics are inherently shareable in a way that list posts, guides, and data roundups are not.
There are two conditions that determine whether an infographic actually earns links versus sitting unnoticed. First, it must present information that other publishers’ audiences genuinely want access to. Second, it must be distributed actively through outreach rather than left to earn links organically. Both conditions need to be met. For how infographic link building fits within a broader strategic approach, see our link building strategies guide and our types of backlinks guide.
The 7 Infographic Types Used for Link Building
Different infographic formats serve different purposes and attract links from different categories of publisher. Choosing the right format for your topic before beginning design significantly improves the end result.
How to Create a Linkable Infographic: Step by Step
Step 1: Research and Validate the Concept
The most common reason infographic link building campaigns fail is choosing a topic without validating whether it has proven link-earning potential. Before any design work begins, confirm that similar infographic content has already attracted links from relevant publishers in your niche.
Two research methods work together effectively. First, browse infographic directories using the URL format visual.ly/tag/[your-niche] and filter results by most favorited. Note which formats and angles have generated significant engagement. Second, use Ahrefs Content Explorer: search for “[your niche] infographic,” filter by referring domains (DR 30+, page traffic 100+), and identify the 4 to 5 infographics with the most backlinks. These become your benchmark assets and your primary outreach target list later.
When synthesising your concept, aim to combine the strongest elements from 2 to 3 existing high-performing infographics rather than replicating any single one. A topic that has earned links in three separate narrower forms often performs better when unified into one comprehensive asset. You can also use Google Trends or Answer the Public to identify emerging topics in your niche that have not yet been covered visually.
Step 2: Source the Data
Data quality is the primary differentiator between infographics that earn dozens of links and those that earn none. Publishers link to infographics that give their readers access to information they could not easily find elsewhere. Generic data assembled from the same sources as every other article in your niche does not achieve this.
Every data point included in your research brief should carry its source URL. This serves as citation evidence for the infographic itself and builds editorial credibility with the publishers you approach during outreach.
Step 3: Design the Infographic
Design quality in 2026 is a threshold requirement, not a differentiator. The availability of Canva and AI design tools means that generic infographics are everywhere. A template used by thousands of other brands signals immediately that minimal investment has been made in the asset. This alone reduces response rates in outreach, because editors are less willing to feature content that looks mass-produced.
For brands without in-house design capability, Upwork provides access to qualified infographic designers with escrow payment that enables revisions until the output meets the required standard. Brief the designer with your complete data set, source URLs, reference design examples, and an explicit requirement that readability takes precedence over visual complexity.
Step 4: Publish with Supporting Text and SEO Optimisation
Publish the infographic in a dedicated blog post with at minimum 300 to 500 words of original text explaining the key insights, your research methodology, and context for the data. Do not publish the image alone. Search engines cannot interpret images directly, so the surrounding text determines how the page is indexed and ranked.
Optimise the image file name for your target keyword before uploading (for example: link-building-statistics-2026-infographic.png). Write descriptive alt text that includes the target keyword naturally. Include the keyword in the page title and meta description. When Hubspot systematically optimised their image alt text, their image search traffic increased by 779% in under 12 months. Below the infographic, include an HTML embed code that publishers can copy and paste to add the infographic to their own sites with automatic attribution back to your original page.
Infographic campaigns produce the strongest results when combined with contextual guest post placements. Linkscope’s marketplace lets you find pre-verified publishers by niche and DR with full data visible before any payment. View the guest posting service for details.
Step 5: The Outreach Campaign
Passive distribution through social media and infographic directories builds brand awareness but rarely generates significant backlinks on its own. The primary driver of links at scale is targeted email outreach to publishers who have already demonstrated they will link to infographic content in your niche.
For the complete outreach framework including email templates and follow-up sequencing, see our link building outreach guide.
Infographic Submission: Directories and Image Sites
Submitting your infographic to dedicated directories and image submission sites extends its reach beyond your outreach list and the publishers who discover it organically. These submissions do not replace outreach but complement it by placing your infographic in front of audiences already looking for visual content to embed and share.
For the complete list of image and infographic submission sites with domain metrics and submission requirements for each, see our image submission sites list and our infographic submission sites list. These resources cover the directories worth prioritising and those where submission effort exceeds the link value returned.
Infographic link building also integrates naturally with digital PR. When your infographic is based on original research or a genuinely newsworthy data point, it becomes a pitchable story for journalists and media outlets, not just a visual asset for bloggers. This crossover is where the highest-authority links typically come from. For the digital PR outreach process alongside infographic campaigns, see our digital PR link building guide.


