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Guide

Internal Linking Strategy: The Complete Guide for SEO in 2026

Internal links are hyperlinks that connect one page of your website to another page on the same website. They distribute link equity, establish topical relevance, help search engines crawl your site, and guide users through your content. This guide covers hub-and-spoke models, siloing, anchor text practices, how many links per page, orphan page detection, auditing tools, and a step-by-step implementation process.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 15 min

“Internal linking is the most underused lever in SEO. We audit sites where teams have spent $50,000 on link building but haven’t structured a single internal link. All that external authority flows into the site and pools on the homepage and a few blog posts. A structured internal linking strategy distributes that equity to the pages that actually need to rank. It’s free, it’s fast, and it works within weeks.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

What this guide covers

  1. Why do internal links matter for SEO?
  2. What is the hub-and-spoke model for internal linking?
  3. How does content siloing work?
  4. What are the best practices for internal link anchor text?
  5. How many internal links should you use per page?
  6. How do you find and fix orphan pages?
  7. How do you build an internal linking strategy from scratch?
  8. What tools help with internal link auditing?
  9. Pro tips from our SEO practice
  10. Common internal linking mistakes
  11. FAQ
Hub-and-Spoke

What is the hub-and-spoke model for internal linking?

The hub-and-spoke model (also called pillar-cluster model) is the most effective internal linking architecture for building topical authority. A hub page (or pillar page) covers a broad topic comprehensively. Spoke pages (or cluster pages) cover specific subtopics in depth. All spoke pages link back to the hub, and the hub links out to all spokes. Here’s how it looks in practice for an SEO topic cluster:
Page type Page Target keyword Links to
Hub (Pillar) SEO Checklist SEO checklist All 6 spoke pages below
Spoke Technical SEO Checklist “technical SEO checklist” Hub + related spokes
Spoke On-Page SEO Checklist “on-page SEO checklist” Hub + related spokes
Spoke Link Building Guide “how to do link building” Hub + related spokes
Spoke Internal Linking Guide “internal linking strategy” Hub + related spokes
Spoke Keyword Research Template “keyword research template” Hub + related spokes
Spoke Domain Authority Guide “how to improve domain authority” Hub + related spokes
The power of hub-and-spoke is mutual reinforcement. The hub page gains authority from all the spokes linking to it. The spoke pages gain authority from the hub (which typically has the most external backlinks) linking to them. Google sees the cluster and understands that your site covers the broad topic comprehensively, which strengthens rankings for every page in the cluster. We structure every client’s content strategy around topic clusters at ScaleGrowth.Digital. A typical cluster starts with 5-8 spoke pages around a central hub. As the cluster grows to 12-20 spokes, the hub page begins dominating its target keyword because Google recognizes the depth of topical coverage. Our SEO checklist serves as the hub page for our SEO resource cluster, with spoke pages covering technical SEO, on-page SEO, link building, and more.
Content Siloing

How does content siloing work?

Content siloing takes the hub-and-spoke model further by creating distinct topical sections (silos) within your site and being intentional about how pages in different silos link to each other. The goal is to prevent “topical dilution,” where pages about unrelated topics link to each other and confuse Google about what each section of your site covers. A well-siloed site might have these silos:
  • SEO silo: SEO checklist, technical SEO, on-page SEO, link building, keyword research, internal linking
  • CRO silo: Landing page optimization, A/B testing, conversion rate tactics, bounce rate, CTA design
  • PPC silo: Google Ads audit, negative keywords, ROAS calculator, CPM calculator
  • Content silo: Content calendar, content brief template, content strategy
Within each silo, pages link to each other freely. The SEO checklist links to the technical SEO checklist, which links to the link building guide, which links back to the SEO checklist. Cross-silo links are used sparingly and only when genuinely relevant. The link building guide might link to a CRO resource if it discusses conversion optimization for link building outreach pages, but it wouldn’t randomly link to a social media calendar template. Strict siloing (zero cross-silo links) is rarely practical or beneficial. A moderate approach works better: link freely within silos and cross-link between silos only when it serves the reader. If a user reading about CRO would genuinely benefit from seeing your SEO checklist (e.g., because page speed affects both SEO and conversion rate), that cross-link adds value and is worth including.
Anchor Text

What are the best practices for internal link anchor text?

Anchor text is the clickable text in a hyperlink. For internal links, descriptive anchor text helps both users and Google understand what the linked page is about. Google has confirmed that anchor text is a ranking signal for the destination page. Use descriptive, keyword-relevant anchor text. Link to your “technical SEO checklist” page using the anchor text “technical SEO checklist” or “technical SEO audit process,” not “click here” or “this article.” The anchor text should describe the destination page’s content. Vary your anchor text naturally. Unlike external backlinks (where over-optimized anchor text can trigger penalties), internal link anchor text can be more keyword-rich. But variation still matters for readability. If you link to your link building guide 10 times across your site, use variations: “link building guide,” “how to build backlinks,” “our link building process,” “earn quality backlinks.” Don’t use the exact same anchor text every time. Avoid generic anchors. “Click here,” “read more,” “learn more,” and “this page” waste an anchor text opportunity. Every internal link is a chance to signal relevance to Google. Generic anchors pass link equity but don’t pass topical signals. Keep anchor text concise. 3-7 words is the sweet spot. “SEO checklist for 2026” is better than “click here to read our comprehensive search engine optimization checklist that we updated for the year 2026 with all the latest best practices.” Don’t stuff keywords into anchors. “SEO, search engine optimization, best SEO checklist, SEO audit, SEO guide” as a single anchor text is keyword stuffing. Write anchor text for humans first. If it reads naturally and describes the destination page, it’s good. One technical note: when multiple links on a single page point to the same destination, Google typically only counts the anchor text of the first link. If your navigation menu already links to “/services/seo/” with the anchor text “SEO Services,” a contextual link later in the body content pointing to the same URL with different anchor text may not pass the body anchor text signal. This is called the “first link priority” principle.
Link Count

How many internal links should you use per page?

The practical guideline is 5-10 internal links per 2,000 words of content, or roughly one link every 200-300 words (Yoast, Traffic Think Tank, 2025-2026). This isn’t a hard rule. A comprehensive guide that legitimately references 15 other pages should include 15 links. A short page with 500 words might only need 2-3. What matters more than total count is relevance. Each internal link should serve one of two purposes:
  1. Help the reader access related or deeper information
  2. Distribute link equity to a page you want to rank
Links that serve neither purpose are clutter. Google’s John Mueller has stated there’s no magic number for internal links per page, but Google does devalue excessive linking. If a page has hundreds of internal links (common on mega-menu navigation and footer link blocks), each individual link passes less equity. This is why contextual links in the body content are more valuable than navigation links: there are fewer of them, so each one passes more weight. A practical implementation rule: every new piece of content you publish should link to 3-5 existing relevant pages, and you should add links from 3-5 existing pages back to the new content. This bidirectional linking process ensures new content is immediately integrated into your site’s link architecture, not left as an orphan page.
Orphan Pages

How do you find and fix orphan pages?

An orphan page is a page on your site that has zero internal links pointing to it. It exists in your CMS and might even appear in your XML sitemap, but no other page on your site links to it. Googlebot may struggle to find it, and even if it’s indexed, it receives zero internal link equity.
An orphan page is a published page with no internal links from any other page on the same website, making it effectively invisible to both users and search engine crawlers navigating through your site’s link structure.
Orphan pages are surprisingly common. Large sites with years of content often have 10-20% orphan pages. Blog posts from 2018 that were never linked from newer content. Product pages for discontinued items that were removed from navigation but not redirected. Category pages created during a redesign that never got linked. How to find orphan pages:
  1. Screaming Frog: Crawl your site with Screaming Frog, then compare the crawled URLs against a list of all URLs from your sitemap or CMS export. URLs in your CMS that weren’t found by the crawler are potential orphans.
  2. Sitebulb: Has a built-in “Orphan Pages” report that automatically identifies pages in your sitemap that aren’t linked from any other page.
  3. Ahrefs Site Audit: Flags orphan pages as part of its internal linking analysis.
  4. Google Search Console: Check “Indexed, not submitted in sitemap” under Coverage. Some of these may be orphan pages that Google found through external links but that have no internal links.
How to fix orphan pages:
  • If the page is valuable and relevant: add internal links from 3-5 related pages.
  • If the page is outdated: redirect it (301) to the most relevant current page.
  • If the page is thin or duplicate: noindex it or merge its content into a stronger page.
  • If the page shouldn’t exist: delete it and let it 404 (or redirect if it has external backlinks).
Fixing orphan pages is one of the fastest SEO wins available. We’ve seen 15-30% traffic increases to previously orphaned pages within 4-6 weeks of adding internal links, without any content changes or external link building.
Implementation

How do you build an internal linking strategy from scratch?

Building an internal linking strategy isn’t a one-time project. It’s an ongoing process that should be part of every content creation and site update workflow. Here’s the process we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital. Step 1: Map your topic clusters. List your core topics (5-10 for most sites). Under each core topic, list the specific pages that belong to that cluster. Identify which page is the hub (pillar) and which are spokes. If you don’t have a hub page for a core topic, that’s your next content priority. Step 2: Audit existing internal links. Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or Sitebulb. Export the internal link data. For each key page, check: how many internal links point to it? What anchor text do they use? Is the page reachable within 3 clicks from the homepage? Identify orphan pages, low-link pages, and pages with no outgoing links. Step 3: Identify your highest-authority pages. Use Ahrefs or Semrush to find pages on your site with the most external backlinks (highest referring domains). These are your “link equity reservoirs.” Internal links from these pages carry the most weight. Make sure they link to your most important ranking targets. Step 4: Create a linking matrix. Build a spreadsheet with your key pages listed both as rows and columns. Mark where internal links exist (or should exist) between pages. This visual map reveals gaps in your internal linking structure. For a 50-page site, this takes about 2 hours and produces immediate action items. Step 5: Implement hub-to-spoke and spoke-to-hub links. Start with your most important topic cluster. Ensure the hub page links to every spoke page, and every spoke links back to the hub. Then add relevant spoke-to-spoke links. Use descriptive anchor text throughout. Step 6: Update your content creation process. Every new piece of content should include 3-5 internal links to existing pages at the time of publication. Within 48 hours of publishing new content, add links from 3-5 existing relevant pages back to the new content. Make this a checklist item in your editorial workflow. Step 7: Audit quarterly. Run an internal link audit every quarter. Check for new orphan pages, broken internal links, and pages that should be linked but aren’t. As your site grows, your internal linking structure needs regular maintenance. A site that was well-linked at 100 pages can develop significant gaps as it grows to 500 pages.
Tools

What tools help with internal link auditing?

You need a crawling tool to audit internal links effectively. Manual auditing isn’t feasible beyond 20-30 pages.
Tool Best for Price (as of March 2026)
Screaming Frog SEO Spider Comprehensive crawl data, internal link analysis, orphan page detection Free (up to 500 URLs), $259/year (unlimited)
Sitebulb Visual internal link graphs, automatic orphan detection, crawl depth analysis From $150/year
Ahrefs Site Audit Internal link opportunities, orphan pages, link equity distribution Included in Ahrefs plans (from $29/mo)
Semrush Site Audit Internal linking issues, crawlability errors, anchor text analysis Included in Semrush plans (from $139.95/mo)
Google Search Console Internal links report showing top linked pages Free
Link Whisper (WordPress) AI-suggested internal links for WordPress sites, bulk editing $77/year (1 site)
Yoast SEO Premium (WordPress) Internal linking suggestions within the WordPress editor $99/year
For most sites, Screaming Frog (free tier for sites under 500 URLs) plus Google Search Console’s internal links report is sufficient to start. As your site grows past 500 pages, invest in Sitebulb or upgrade to Screaming Frog’s paid version for deeper analysis. WordPress users should consider Link Whisper for automated internal link suggestions during content creation. Google Search Console’s Links report (under Links > Internal Links) shows which pages on your site have the most internal links. This is useful for identifying under-linked pages. If your most important service page has only 5 internal links while a low-value blog post has 50, you have a distribution problem.
Pro Tips

Pro tips from our SEO practice

  • Link from high-authority pages to high-priority pages. Find your top 10 pages by referring domains (Ahrefs > Best by Links). These pages hold the most link equity. Add internal links from each of these pages to the ranking targets that need the most help. This is the single most impactful internal linking action you can take.
  • Use breadcrumbs with BreadcrumbList schema. Breadcrumb navigation creates automatic internal links at every level of your site hierarchy. When combined with BreadcrumbList schema, they can also appear in search results, improving CTR. Every page should have breadcrumbs. Our technical SEO checklist includes breadcrumb implementation as a P2 item.
  • Don’t rely on navigation menus for all your internal linking. Navigation links appear on every page, which means each individual nav link passes relatively little equity. Contextual links in body content are page-specific and carry more weight. Use navigation for UX and contextual links for SEO.
  • Update old content with links to new content. When you publish a new guide on a topic, go back and add links from your 3-5 most relevant existing pages to the new guide. Most teams publish and forget. This simple step integrates new content into your link architecture immediately instead of leaving it orphaned for months.
  • Track internal link changes alongside ranking changes. When you add 5-10 internal links to an underperforming page, note the date. Check rankings for that page’s target keyword at 2, 4, and 8 weeks. You’ll build data on how quickly internal linking changes affect your specific site, which informs future prioritization.
Common Mistakes

Common internal linking mistakes

  • Linking everything to the homepage. Your homepage likely has the most internal links already (through navigation, logo, footer). It doesn’t need more. Direct internal links to the pages that need authority: service pages, product category pages, and key content pieces that are competing for rankings.
  • Using “click here” and “read more” as anchor text. These generic anchors waste a ranking signal. Every internal link is a chance to tell Google what the destination page is about. Use descriptive, keyword-relevant anchor text that reads naturally in context.
  • Creating links and then breaking them. Broken internal links (links pointing to pages that no longer exist or have moved) waste link equity and create poor user experience. After any URL change, content deletion, or site migration, audit for broken internal links. Screaming Frog and Ahrefs both flag these automatically.
  • Only linking forward in time. Most teams link from new content to old content but forget to add links from old content to new content. If you publish a new internal linking guide (this page), you should add links to it from your existing SEO checklist, link building guide, and domain authority guide. Bidirectional linking is how clusters build authority.
  • Over-linking within a single paragraph. A paragraph with 5 internal links in 3 sentences is distracting and dilutes the value of each link. Spread internal links naturally across the content. If multiple links are relevant in one section, stagger them across paragraphs.
Related Resources

Related Resources

How to Do Link Building: 12 Tactics

Complete guide to earning external backlinks through guest posting, digital PR, and outreach. Read Guide

How to Improve Domain Authority

Actionable guide to increasing DA through links, content, and technical optimization. Read Guide

Complete SEO Checklist (47 Points)

The comprehensive SEO checklist including on-page, off-page, technical, and AI visibility items. Get Checklist

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How many internal links should a page have?

A practical guideline is 5-10 internal links per 2,000 words of content, or roughly one link every 200-300 words (Yoast, Traffic Think Tank, 2025-2026). The exact number depends on the content length and how many genuinely relevant pages you have to link to. A comprehensive guide might naturally include 15+ links. A short page might only need 2-3. Prioritize relevance over hitting a specific count.

Do internal links help SEO?

Yes. Internal links serve three SEO functions: they distribute link equity from high-authority pages to other pages on your site, they signal topical relationships between pages (helping Google understand what your site covers), and they make pages discoverable to search engine crawlers. Google’s own documentation confirms that internal links are the primary way Googlebot discovers and navigates websites.

What is an orphan page?

An orphan page is a published page on your website that has zero internal links from any other page. It may exist in your CMS and XML sitemap, but no other page links to it. Search engines struggle to find and properly rank orphan pages because they receive no internal link equity. Large sites commonly have 10-20% orphan pages. Use Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, or Ahrefs Site Audit to identify them.

What is the hub-and-spoke model for content?

The hub-and-spoke model (also called pillar-cluster) structures content around a central hub page covering a broad topic and multiple spoke pages covering specific subtopics. All spokes link to the hub and the hub links to all spokes, creating a dense internal link network. This structure signals topical depth to Google and distributes link equity efficiently across the topic cluster.

Should internal links open in a new tab?

No. Internal links should open in the same tab. Opening in a new tab (target=”_blank”) is appropriate for external links that take users to a different website. For internal links, same-tab navigation maintains the natural browsing flow and lets users use the back button to return. Opening internal links in new tabs creates tab clutter and confuses navigation. The exception: links within forms or multi-step processes where the user might lose unsaved progress.

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