This backlink audit template is a ready-to-use spreadsheet for reviewing every link pointing to your site. It includes columns for domain authority, anchor text, link type, toxicity scoring, and a keep/disavow/reclaim action field. Below, we walk through the full audit process from data export to final cleanup.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 9 min
A backlink audit is the process of reviewing every inbound link pointing to your website, assessing its quality and relevance, and deciding whether to keep, reclaim, or disavow each link.
| Column | Data Type | Source | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Referring Domain | Text (e.g., example.com) | Ahrefs/Semrush export | Root domain of the linking site |
| Source URL | Full URL | Ahrefs/Semrush export | Exact page containing the link |
| Target URL | Full URL | Ahrefs/Semrush export | Your page being linked to |
| DA/DR | Number (0-100) | Ahrefs DR or Moz DA | Authority score of the linking domain |
| Anchor Text | Text | Ahrefs/Semrush export | Clickable text of the link |
| Link Type | Dofollow / Nofollow / UGC / Sponsored | Ahrefs/Semrush export | Whether the link passes PageRank |
| Toxicity Score | Number (0-100) | Semrush Toxicity or manual | Risk level (higher = more toxic) |
| Organic Traffic | Number | Ahrefs/Semrush | Monthly organic visits to referring domain |
| First Seen | Date | Ahrefs/Semrush export | When the link was first detected |
| Status | Live / Broken / Removed | Manual check or tool | Current state of the link |
| Category | Text (e.g., Blog, News, Directory) | Manual classification | Type of referring site |
| Action | Keep / Disavow / Reclaim / Monitor | Your decision | What to do with this link |
| Action | Criteria | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Keep | DR 20+, relevant niche, real traffic, natural anchor | Industry blog post linking to your guide |
| Disavow | Toxicity 60+, PBN pattern, hacked site, foreign spam | Auto-generated pages with exact-match anchors |
| Reclaim | Was valuable but now broken (404) or removed | DR 50 site that redesigned and dropped your link |
| Monitor | Borderline quality, new link, uncertain intent | New directory listing you didn’t request |
“The goal of a backlink audit isn’t to build the cleanest profile possible. It’s to understand what you have, protect what’s valuable, remove what’s dangerous, and recover what you’ve lost. We’ve seen clients lose 15% of their organic traffic because a single high-DR link broke during a site migration. That’s recoverable if you’re auditing regularly.” Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Correct .txt format, when to use it, common mistakes, and how to submit to Google. Get Template →
Use Template 4-5 for broken link reclaim outreach from your audit findings. Get Templates →
Include backlink audit findings as part of your SEO proposal’s current state analysis. Get Template →
Audit your backlink profile quarterly for active sites and after any significant ranking drops. Sites in competitive niches or those that have previously been hit by link-related penalties should audit monthly. A full audit takes 2-4 hours for sites with under 5,000 referring domains. For larger profiles, budget a full day.
You need two primary tools: Google Search Console (free, shows Google’s view of your links) and either Ahrefs or Semrush (paid, provides DR/DA scores, toxicity analysis, and competitor comparison). Export data from both sources. GSC gives you Google’s actual link data. Third-party tools give you scoring metrics. Using both provides the most complete picture.
Toxic backlinks typically come from sites with no real content, sites in unrelated foreign languages, link farms or PBN networks, hacked sites, and domains with DA/DR under 10 and no organic traffic. A link isn’t toxic just because the DA is low. Context matters. A relevant industry blog with DR 15 and real readers is better than a generic directory with DR 40 and no traffic.
No. Google’s John Mueller has stated that most sites never need to use the disavow tool. Google’s algorithms are sophisticated enough to ignore most spammy links automatically. Only disavow links if you have a manual penalty for unnatural links, or if you have clear evidence of a deliberate negative SEO attack. Over-disavowing can remove links that were actually helping your rankings.
Lost backlinks fall into three categories: removed (the linking page still exists but your link was removed), broken (the linking page returns a 404), and changed (the link now points elsewhere). For removed links, email the site owner to ask why and offer updated content. For broken links, reach out with a replacement URL. For changed links, check if a redirect can recapture the value. Ahrefs’ Lost Backlinks report makes finding these straightforward.
Our SEO team runs full backlink audits as part of every engagement. We analyze your link profile, identify toxic links, find reclaim opportunities, and build a digital PR strategy to earn the links that move rankings. Get a Backlink Audit →