Off-Page SEO · Article 1

Link Building Basics: Backlinks, Quality Signals & Link Types

~14 min read Updated 2026-06-24 MagicSEO Editors · Human Reviewed Off-Page SEO

If content is your "self-description" to search engines, backlinks are others' "reviews" of you. Backlinks are votes of confidence from other websites—they tell search engines your content is worth referencing. This article clarifies what backlinks are, what makes a link good, different link types, and why "quality always trumps quantity."

What Are Backlinks#

A backlink is simply a link from another website pointing to your website. Google's PageRank was originally built on a simple intuition: a page linked by more quality pages is more likely to be important. Links thus became a form of "voting"—but not all votes are equal; votes from authoritative, relevant sites carry far more weight than those from unrelated, low-quality sites.

Links = Weighted VotesThink of backlinks as votes: votes from trusted people count more, while coordinated vote-rigging gets detected and even penalized. This is why quality matters far more than quantity.

Link Quality Signals#

SignalMeaningGood Indicators
AuthorityIs the source site trusted, well-knownHas good reputation and links itself
RelevanceIs the source topic related to youSame field/related topics
Position & ContextWhere the link appearsIn natural body content
Anchor TextThe clickable text of the linkNatural, relevant, not over-optimized

A single link from an authoritative, relevant site's body content can be worth dozens of unrelated footer links.

Link Types: dofollow vs rel Attributes#

By default, links pass authority (commonly called dofollow). Use the rel attribute to label link nature:

rel valueMeaningUsed For
(none)Normal link, endorsing itContent you vouch for
nofollowNot endorsing this linkUntrusted external links
sponsoredPaid/sponsored linkAds, partnerships
ugcUser-generated content linkComments, forums
Paid Links Must Be LabeledPaid or sponsored links should use sponsored or nofollow. Unlabeled paid links are seen as ranking manipulation—a violation. See risks in Acquiring Quality Links.

Natural vs Earned Links#

  • Natural links: Given voluntarily by others who appreciate your content—most ideal and sustainable;
  • Earned links: Actively pursued by you (guest posts, resource pages, etc.)—accepted when methods comply and content truly has value;
  • Avoid: Manipulation like buying links, link farms, large-scale exchanges.

The key isn't "passive vs active" but "earned through genuine value or not." See Acquiring Quality Links for acquisition methods.

Right Link Building Mindset#

Be Link-Worthy FirstThe best link strategy is to create content worth linking—data, tools, in-depth guides. Links are the result, not the starting point. This aligns with building entity & authority signals.

Frequently Asked Questions#

What are backlinks and why do they matter for SEO?

Backlinks are links from other websites pointing to your website. Search engines view them as recommendations or votes: when multiple trusted, relevant sites link to you, it indicates your content is worth referencing, helping boost authority and rankings. Backlinks are a core off-page SEO signal, but quality matters far more than quantity—a few high-quality links outweigh many low-quality ones.

What signals determine link quality?

Three main factors: source site authority (is it trusted, well-known, does it have good links itself), relevance (is the link source related to your topic), and link position & context (appearing in natural body content is usually better than footer or link farms). Also consider whether anchor text is natural and whether the link gets real user clicks. A link from an authoritative, relevant site's body content is far more valuable than an unrelated footer link.

What do nofollow, sponsored, and ugc mean?

These are rel attributes that label link nature. nofollow means not endorsing the link; sponsored marks paid or sponsored links (like ads, partnerships); ugc marks links from user-generated content (like comments, forums). Google treats these as hints for understanding links. Paid links should use sponsored or nofollow, otherwise they may be seen as ranking manipulation violations.

What's the difference between natural and earned links?

Natural links are given voluntarily by others who appreciate your content—no request needed, most ideal and sustainable. Earned links are actively pursued by you, like guest posts, resource page recommendations—as long as methods comply and content truly has value, these are accepted. What to avoid: manipulation like buying links, link farms, large-scale exchanges. The key isn't active vs passive, but whether earned through genuine value.