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Should You Buy Backlinks?

Table Of Contents

⚡ Quick Summary
  • Buying backlinks violates Google’s guidelines — but 74%+ of link builders do it anyway
  • Low-quality paid links get ignored or trigger penalties — neither outcome is worth the money
  • Quality matters far more than price — a $50 link from a bad site is worse than no link at all
  • Safe paid strategies exist: vetted guest posts, niche edits, and digital PR all work if done right
  • The answer isn’t yes or no — it depends entirely on how you do it

Buying backlinks means paying a website owner to place a link on their site that points back to yours. The idea is simple: backlinks are one of Google’s biggest ranking signals, so more links from more trusted sites should mean better rankings.

But there’s a massive gap between theory and reality. Not all backlinks are created equal, and not all paid links work the way you hope. A link from a respected industry site is worth something. A link from a site that exists purely to sell links is worth nothing — and can actively hurt you.

The real question isn’t whether buying backlinks is possible. It’s whether it’s safe, and whether it actually works. Let’s get into both.

Why Google Is Against Buying Backlinks

Google has been clear about this for years: buying or selling links that pass PageRank violates their spam policies. If they catch you, your site can be demoted in rankings or removed from search results entirely.

There are two ways Google handles paid links:

1. It ignores them

Since the Penguin 4.0 update in 2016, Google’s algorithm can detect and ignore many paid and spammy links. If your links get ignored, they don’t help rankings — meaning you spent money on nothing.

2. It penalizes your site

Google uses both algorithmic filters and human reviewers to catch link schemes. A manual action can remove your pages from search results entirely. These are hard to recover from and take months to resolve.

⚠️ Important: Manual penalties for link buying are rare — Google mostly just ignores or devalues suspected paid links. But “rare” isn’t “zero.” For businesses that depend on search traffic, even a small risk of deindexing is a serious consideration.

Here’s the honest truth though: Google knows it can’t catch every paid link. Plenty of businesses run paid link strategies and never get penalized. The outcome depends almost entirely on the quality of the links you’re buying and how naturally they fit your backlink profile. Learn more about what separates safe from risky in our white hat vs black hat link building guide.

Why People Still Buy Backlinks Anyway

Despite the risks, surveys consistently show that the majority of link builders pay for links. Authority Hacker’s research found that 74.3% of link builders buy backlinks. Here’s why:

Earning links organically has become harder

A decade ago, a solid piece of content and some outreach emails could earn you dozens of links. Today, most site owners know what links are worth. Many won’t link to you for free — even if your content is genuinely great. The market has changed.

Paid links can still move rankings

When a paid link looks indistinguishable from an earned one, Google often treats it the same way. Many competitive industries — finance, iGaming, insurance, legal — are full of pages that rank primarily because of paid links. The strategy works, until it doesn’t. See our link building statistics for a full picture of how the industry actually operates.

Organic link building is slow

For businesses with real revenue goals and real timelines, waiting 12–18 months for organic links to compound isn’t always an option. Paid links offer a faster path to results — if done correctly. That’s why understanding how to buy backlinks safely is so critical.

The Real Risks of Buying Backlinks

There are three things that can go wrong when you buy backlinks, and each has a different level of severity:

RiskWhat HappensSeverity
Links get ignoredGoogle devalues them — no ranking benefit, money wastedLow
Algorithmic penaltyRankings drop during a Google updateMedium
Manual actionHuman reviewer flags your site — pages removed from resultsHigh

Manual actions are rare — but they do happen, especially when link buying is obvious (mass exact-match anchor text, links from clear link farms, sudden spikes). For most sites buying carefully vetted links in small volumes, the algorithmic risk is the more realistic concern. Check your existing profile first with our backlink quality guide.

How Google Detects Paid Links

Google looks for patterns that suggest links aren’t being given on editorial merit. The biggest red flags are:

  • Exact-match anchor text on every link. If every backlink uses your target keyword as anchor text, that’s a clear footprint. Natural links use your brand name, URL, or contextual phrases.
  • Sudden backlink spikes. Going from 10 referring domains to 500 overnight is a massive red flag. Backlink velocity should look gradual and natural.
  • Links from obvious link farms. Sites with no real traffic, no editorial content, and dozens of outbound links with commercial anchor text are known to Google. If they’re on a shared list of link sellers, Google likely knows too.
  • Zero topical relevance. A casino site getting links from food blogs or pet sites is a pattern, not an editorial choice. Google expects your link profile to reflect your actual industry.
  • Private Blog Networks (PBNs). Google actively hunts PBNs. Being linked from a deindexed PBN doesn’t just waste your money — it can associate your site with a known spam network.

Understanding these signals is what separates smart paid link building from reckless gambling with your rankings. Our full types of backlinks guide covers which link types carry these risks and which don’t.

Safe vs. Unsafe: Which Paid Link Methods Actually Work?

Not all paid link methods carry the same risk. Here’s how the main approaches stack up:

MethodRisk LevelWorth It?
Fiverr bulk link packagesVery High❌ Never
PBN linksVery High❌ Never
Link farms / directoriesHigh❌ Avoid
Niche edits (vetted sites)Medium🟠 If done carefully
Paid guest posts (real sites)Medium✅ Yes, with vetting
Sponsored content (nofollow)Low✅ Safe, less SEO value
Digital PR (paid outreach)Very Low✅ Best approach

The pattern is simple: the cheaper and easier the link, the more dangerous it is. Quality links require real relationships, real editorial standards, and real content — and that’s exactly what makes them valuable.

How to Buy Backlinks Safely: 5 Rules to Follow

If you’re going to invest in paid links, these rules separate the strategies that work from the ones that get sites penalized:

1. Vet every site before paying

Check the site’s organic traffic in Ahrefs or Semrush. Look for a consistent traffic trend — no sudden drops after major Google updates. Check the content quality with your own eyes. Does it look like a real publication with real readers? If not, skip it. Our how to check backlink quality guide covers exactly what to look for.

2. Prioritise topical relevance

A DR 40 site that’s genuinely relevant to your niche is worth more than a DR 70 general blog. Google values the context a link comes from, not just the raw authority score. Check our domain authority ranking benchmarks guide to understand what DR targets actually make sense for your site.

3. Diversify your anchor text

Never use exact-match keywords as anchor text across all your links. Use a mix of branded anchors (your company name), naked URLs, partial-match phrases, and natural contextual anchors. A healthy anchor text profile looks like what an editorial link profile would look like — varied and natural.

4. Release links gradually

Buying 50 links and publishing them all at once looks like manipulation. Space your paid links out over weeks and months. A natural backlink velocity looks like steady growth, not sudden spikes. Our link building strategies guide covers how to pace a campaign correctly.

5. Work with transparent providers

Only work with agencies or marketplaces that show you exactly where your links are going before you pay. You should be able to see the domain, traffic, DR, and placement context upfront. If a provider won’t show you this, that tells you everything. Browse Linkscope’s publisher marketplace to see what transparent link buying actually looks like.

Red Flags That Tell You a Paid Link Will Hurt You

  • Price seems too low — quality links cost real money. $5–$20 links are always junk.
  • The site accepts content on every topic — finance, casino, health, pets — all on one domain.
  • Traffic dropped sharply around a known Google algorithm update and never recovered.
  • Every outbound link in the content uses exact-match commercial anchor text.
  • The agency guarantees a specific number of links within days — that’s a PBN signal.
  • No transparency on where links are placed or who the publisher is before payment.
  • High DR but almost no organic traffic — a sign of a manipulated or dead site.

Safe Alternatives to Blind Link Buying

If the risks of paid links concern you, these approaches build authority without the same exposure:

Digital PR

Getting your brand featured in real news publications earns links that Google will never devalue — because those sites don’t exist to sell links. It’s slower, but the results compound over time and survive every algorithm update. Our digital PR link building guide shows how to get started.

HARO-style outreach

Platforms like Connectively (formerly HARO) connect you with journalists looking for expert quotes. A single response can land you a backlink from a major publication. Response rates are low, but the links you earn are among the highest quality available. See our HARO link building guide for a step-by-step approach.

Creating genuinely link-worthy content

Original research, comprehensive data studies, unique tools, and genuinely useful guides attract links without outreach. This is a long game, but it builds a backlink profile that no algorithm update can touch.

Guest posting on real publications

Pitching real guest posts to real publications — not paying for placements on link-selling sites — builds authority and relationships. See our guest posting service for a done-for-you version of this approach.

Link reclamation

Finding broken links pointing to your domain, or unlinked brand mentions, and converting them into backlinks is completely free. Our link building outreach guide covers how to identify and convert these opportunities.

So, Should You Buy Backlinks?

Here’s the straight answer: it depends on how you do it.

Buying low-quality links from Fiverr, PBNs, or link farms? No. Never. The risk is real and the benefit is zero.

Paying for placement on a genuinely authoritative, topically relevant site with real traffic and editorial standards? That’s a different conversation — and it’s one most serious SEOs are having.

The line between “paying for a link” and “paying for quality content distribution” is thinner than Google wants you to believe. Many respected link building agencies operate in this space every day, for brands you’d recognise, without penalties. The key is quality — always quality — over volume, price, or convenience.

❌ Don’t Do This
  • Bulk link packages from freelance sites
  • Private Blog Networks (PBNs)
  • Link farms or low-quality directories
  • Buying links blindly without vetting
  • Releasing dozens of links all at once
✅ Do This Instead
  • Vetted guest posts on real publications
  • Niche edits on traffic-verified sites
  • Digital PR and journalist outreach
  • Transparent marketplaces with real metrics
  • Gradual, diverse, relevant link acquisition

If you want to see how much a smart link building campaign should actually cost, use our backlink ROI calculator to model your investment — or our backlink cost calculator to benchmark any quote you’ve received.

For real examples of what quality link building actually delivers, see our link building case study and our one backlink case study — showing what a single well-placed link can actually do for your rankings.

Buy Backlinks the Right Way

Browse Linkscope’s verified publisher marketplace. See real DR, traffic, and niche data before you pay a penny. No PBNs. No link farms. No surprises.

Browse Publisher Marketplace →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is buying backlinks illegal? +
No, buying backlinks is not illegal. It violates Google’s webmaster guidelines, which is a very different thing. The consequence isn’t a legal penalty — it’s a potential drop in your search rankings or, in serious cases, removal from Google’s index. Many businesses buy links every day without legal or criminal consequences. The risk is purely in how Google responds.
How much does it cost to buy a backlink? +
Prices vary enormously. Low-quality links from freelance marketplaces can cost $5–$50, but these are almost always worthless or harmful. Mid-range niche edits and guest posts on real sites typically cost $100–$400. Premium links from high-DR, high-traffic sites can run $500–$1,500+. The key rule: if it’s cheap, it’s almost certainly low quality. Use our backlink cost calculator to benchmark what fair pricing looks like for your target metrics.
Will Google penalise me for buying backlinks? +
It depends on the quality of the links and how obviously paid they appear. Google mostly ignores low-quality paid links rather than actively penalising them — meaning they waste your money without helping your rankings. Obvious link schemes (PBNs, exact-match anchor spam, sudden mass link acquisition) are more likely to trigger algorithmic filters or manual reviews. Buying carefully vetted links in small volumes from real, high-traffic sites carries far less risk.
What’s the difference between a niche edit and a guest post? +
A niche edit (also called a curated link or link insertion) means paying a site owner to add your link into an existing article that’s already published and indexed. A guest post means writing a brand new article that gets published on someone else’s site, with your link included in the content. Niche edits are faster and often cheaper. Guest posts give you more control over the content and context. Both can work well — the key is the quality of the site, not the method. See our full comparison in the guest posts vs niche edits guide.
How do I know if a site is worth buying a link from? +
Check four things: (1) Organic traffic — does it receive consistent traffic from Google? Look for a stable or growing trend, not a site that collapsed after an update. (2) Topical relevance — is the site in or close to your niche? (3) Content quality — does it look like a real editorial publication or a link-selling shell site? (4) Outbound link patterns — are the existing outbound links natural and contextual, or are they all exact-match commercial anchors? Our how to check backlink quality guide walks through each of these checks in detail.
What are the best alternatives to buying backlinks? +
The most effective alternatives are digital PR (earning links from news publications through expert quotes or original research), creating genuinely linkable content (data studies, tools, original guides), HARO-style journalist outreach, and building real relationships with site owners in your niche through guest posting. These approaches take longer but produce links that compound in value over time and survive algorithm updates. See our link building strategies guide for a complete playbook.
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