Definition
An internal link is any hyperlink that points from one page on your website to another page on the same website. Internal links help users navigate your content, help search engines discover and crawl your pages, and distribute ranking authority (often called "link equity") across your site.
Internal linking is the practice of connecting pages within the same domain using hyperlinks. Every time you add a link from your blog post to your pricing page, from a product page to a related guide, or from your homepage to a category page, you are creating an internal link.
That is it. No mystery, no jargon. If the link keeps a visitor on your site rather than sending them elsewhere, it is internal.
You encounter internal links constantly, whether you notice them or not. Wikipedia is perhaps the most famous example: nearly every article links to dozens of other Wikipedia pages. That dense internal link structure is a major reason Wikipedia ranks for practically everything. Your site can apply the same principle on a smaller, more focused scale.
External links, by contrast, point from your domain to a different website entirely. Both matter for SEO, but they serve different purposes. (We cover the distinctions in more depth in our guide to internal links vs external links.)
Internal links perform three core functions:
Here is a simple example. Suppose you run an e-commerce site selling running shoes. Your blog post "How to Choose Running Shoes for Beginners" could link to:
Each of those internal links tells both the reader and Google: "This page over here is relevant and worth visiting." The more thoughtfully you build these connections, the better your site performs.
It is worth understanding the mechanics behind why this works. Google uses links to calculate something called PageRank, which distributes ranking authority across the web. While backlinks from external sites are the primary driver of PageRank, internal links determine how that authority flows within your own domain. Without internal links, pages that earn backlinks hoard all the value. With them, that value spreads to the pages that need it most.
SEO has no shortage of tactics that promise results. Internal linking is one of the few that consistently delivers, year after year. And in 2026, with AI-generated search results and zero-click queries reshaping how people find information, internal links matter more than ever.
The reason is simple: internal linking is one of the few SEO factors you control completely. You cannot force another site to link to you. You cannot control Google's algorithm updates. But you can decide exactly how your own pages connect to each other, and that decision has a measurable impact on rankings, traffic, and user engagement.
John Mueller, Google's Search Advocate, does not mince words on the topic:
"Internal linking is super critical for SEO. I think it's one of the biggest things that you can do on a website."
John Mueller, Google
That is not a vague endorsement.[1] Mueller has repeatedly stated that internal links are one of the primary signals Google uses to understand which pages on your site are most important. When Google's own search advocate tells you something is "one of the biggest things," it is worth paying attention.
4x
Pages with 40-44 internal links get 4x more clicks from Google
Source: Zyppy (23M internal links across 1,800 sites)
Expert opinion is useful. Data is better. Let us look at what the research actually shows.
Zyppy analysed 23 million internal links across 1,800 websites and found that pages with 40 to 44 internal links pointing to them received roughly 4x more clicks from Google than pages with only a handful of links.[2] The correlation was striking and consistent: more internal links meant more organic traffic, up to a point.
Meanwhile, Ahrefs found that 66.2% of websites have at least one page with only a single dofollow incoming internal link.[3] That means the majority of sites have pages that are barely connected to the rest of their content. These semi-orphaned pages are fighting for rankings with one hand tied behind their back.
Perhaps the most compelling evidence comes from SEOTesting and Screaming Frog, who ran 15 controlled internal linking tests. The average result? A 173.5% improvement in clicks, with 80% of tests producing positive outcomes.[4] That is not a marginal gain. That is the kind of improvement most SEOs dream about, and it came from something as straightforward as adding internal links.
Ryan Jones, a well-known voice in enterprise SEO, summed it up nicely:
"Internal linking is a boring, slow, slog on enterprise sites, but there's nothing more worthy of your time. It's always a win."
Ryan Jones[5]
Here is where things get interesting for 2026. Internal links are no longer just about Google's traditional search results. They are shaping how AI systems understand and cite your content.
Cognism studied which pages large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT and Perplexity tend to reference in their answers.[6] Their finding was clear: top AI-cited pages averaged 35 to 45 internal links pointing to them, compared to a median of just 20 to 25 for pages that were rarely cited. Pages with strong internal linking structures were significantly more likely to appear in AI-generated responses.
35-45
Average internal links on top AI-cited pages (vs 20-25 median)
Source: Cognism LLM Content Optimisation Study
Why? Because AI systems rely on contextual signals to determine which pages are authoritative on a given topic. When your content is tightly connected through internal links, with clear topical clusters and well-structured pathways between related pages, these systems treat it as more trustworthy and comprehensive.
As Ilse Van Rensburg from Cognism puts it:
"Backlinks build authority. Internal links build context. And both increase your chances of becoming AI-visible and human-relevant."
Ilse Van Rensburg, Cognism[7]
If your SEO strategy for 2026 does not include a plan for AI visibility, you are already behind. And internal links are one of the most practical tools you have to influence how AI systems represent your brand. (For a broader look at linking strategy, see our complete guide to internal linking strategy.)
Not all internal links carry the same weight. The type of link, where it sits on the page, and how it is coded all affect how much value it passes. Here is a breakdown of the five main types.
| Type | What It Is | SEO Value | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contextual | Links within body text that point to related content on your site. | High | Always. These are the most valuable type for SEO. Use descriptive anchor text that tells both readers and Google what the target page covers. |
| Navigational | Links in your main menu, sidebar navigation, or header. | Medium | Site-wide structure. Good for top-level pages, but every page gets the same links, diluting their specificity. |
| Breadcrumb | Hierarchical trail showing the path from homepage to current page (e.g., Home > Blog > SEO). | Medium | Category and sub-category pages. Helps Google understand your site hierarchy. |
| Footer / Sidebar | Links placed in the footer or sidebar, often repeated across the site. | Low to Medium | Legal pages, key resource hubs, or popular content. Avoid stuffing dozens of links here. |
| Related Posts | Automatically or manually curated links to similar articles, usually at the bottom of a page. | Medium | Blog posts and content pages. Keeps readers engaged and distributes authority to older content. |
The key takeaway: contextual links within your body content are the most powerful. Navigation, breadcrumbs, and footer links all help, but they are generic by nature. When you write a sentence that naturally references another page and link to it with descriptive anchor text, that is the link Google values most.
For a deeper look at how many links you should include per page, check out our guide on how many internal links per page is too many.
Most SEO advice about internal linking focuses on quantity. "Add more internal links" is the standard recommendation. But Cyrus Shepard's research at Zyppy uncovered something more nuanced: anchor text variety matters more than raw link count.[8]
In their study, pages that received internal links with exact-match anchor text (where the clickable text precisely matched the target keyword) saw 5x more traffic than pages with vague or generic anchor text.[9] Five times. That is an enormous difference, and it is entirely within your control.
5x
More traffic from internal links using exact-match anchor text
Source: Zyppy SEO Study
But here is the nuance. Shepard found that the real magic was not in using the same anchor text repeatedly. It was in using a variety of descriptive, keyword-rich anchors. As he explained:
"We should be increasing not necessarily the number of internal links, but increasing our anchor text variations."
Cyrus Shepard, Zyppy[10]
So if you are linking to a page about "email marketing best practices," do not use that exact phrase every single time. Mix it up:
Each variation gives Google additional context about what the target page covers, painting a richer picture of its relevance.
Shepard's research also revealed a lesser-known benefit: the source page gains traffic too. In his words:
"Both pages rose in traffic by adding the internal links. It's just not the page you're linking to, it's the page you're linking from that is rising in traffic."
Cyrus Shepard, Zyppy[11]
This makes sense when you think about it. By linking to a relevant page, you are making the source page more useful and more comprehensive. Google rewards that.
The practical takeaway is clear. Stop obsessing over how many links to add. Instead, focus on writing better, more varied anchor text. Use natural language. Describe what the reader will find on the linked page. Vary your phrasing across different source pages. The combination of descriptive anchors and genuine relevance is far more powerful than brute-force link building.
Even experienced site owners make internal linking errors. Here are the five most common mistakes we see, and each one is costing you traffic.
Internal linking is a high-impact, low-risk activity. But there are specific mistakes that undermine its effectiveness. Some of these are so common that they have become almost standard practice on many websites, which is exactly why fixing them gives you a competitive advantage.
An orphan page has no (or almost no) internal links pointing to it. It exists on your site, but nothing connects to it. Ahrefs found that 66.2% of websites have at least one page with only a single dofollow incoming internal link.[12] And remember, 96.55% of all pages get zero organic traffic from Google.[13] Orphan pages are almost guaranteed to be in that group.
Fix: Run a full internal link audit to find pages with few or no incoming internal links. Then add relevant links from your existing content.
"Click here to learn more" tells Google nothing about the target page. Neither does "read more" or "this article." These are wasted opportunities. Use descriptive, keyword-relevant anchor text instead. Every internal link is a chance to send a relevance signal.
Your navigation menu links to the same pages on every single page of your site. While this is important for structure, it is not enough. Contextual links within your body content carry more weight because they are specific and editorial. A link from your navigation tells Google "this page exists." A contextual link within a relevant paragraph tells Google "this page is specifically relevant to this topic."
Some pages on large sites are buried 15 or more clicks away from the homepage. Search engine crawlers often struggle to reach these deep pages, and even when they do find them, the pages receive very little authority because of how far they sit from the site's core. Reducing crawl depth through strategic internal links can bring these pages back to life.
Your homepage already gets the most internal links of any page (every navigation menu links to it). Spending your internal link budget adding even more links to the homepage is wasteful. Instead, direct those links to the pages that actually need a boost: deep content pages, newly published articles, and pages targeting competitive keywords.
The common thread across all these mistakes is a lack of intentionality. Most sites accumulate internal links passively through templates, navigation, and whatever a content writer happens to link to on the day of publishing. The sites that win at internal linking are the ones that treat it as a deliberate, ongoing strategy rather than an afterthought.
You do not need a massive site restructure to improve your internal linking. Start with these five steps and you will see measurable results within weeks.
The key to this entire process is consistency. A one-off internal linking sprint will produce results, but the sites that see sustained improvements are the ones that build linking into their content workflow. Every time you publish a new article, spend five minutes adding links from existing pages to the new one, and from the new one back to relevant older content. That single habit will outperform most SEO tactics over a 12-month period.
This process works. But it is time-consuming, especially on larger sites. That is exactly why we built Linki.
There is no fixed number. Zyppy's research shows that pages receiving 40 to 44 internal links tend to get the most organic clicks.[14] However, quality and relevance matter more than hitting a specific count. Every internal link should exist because it genuinely helps the reader or provides useful context, not because you are chasing a number. For most standard blog posts, 5 to 15 contextual internal links is a practical range. For pillar pages or comprehensive guides, 20 to 40 may be appropriate. (We break this down further in our piece on how many internal links per page is too many.)
Yes, significantly. Google's John Mueller has called internal linking "super critical for SEO."[15] Research from Zyppy, Ahrefs, and Screaming Frog consistently shows that well-linked pages receive more organic traffic. Internal links help Google discover your content, understand its relevance, and determine which pages are most important on your site. They also improve user engagement by keeping visitors on your site longer.
An internal link points from one page on your website to another page on the same website. An external link (also called an outbound link) points from your website to a page on a different website. Both are valuable for SEO, but they serve different purposes. Internal links distribute authority within your site and help with navigation. External links signal trust and provide additional resources for readers. Incoming external links (backlinks) from other sites remain one of Google's strongest ranking signals. (For a full comparison, see our guide to internal links vs external links.)
Internal links themselves do not carry a penalty risk. However, poor internal linking practices can waste your SEO potential. Linking with vague anchor text like "click here," creating circular link loops, or stuffing pages with dozens of irrelevant links can dilute the signals you send to search engines. The goal is always relevance and usefulness, not volume for its own sake.
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