Website Spec
SEO Recommended Updated 2026-05-29

Internal linking

Links from one page on a site to another. The strongest signal you control for telling crawlers and AI agents what a page is about and how important it is.

What it is

An internal link is an <a href> from one URL on a site to another URL on the same site. Internal links form the graph that crawlers walk, that screen-reader users navigate, and that AI agents follow to gather context.

<p>
  Read the <a href="/seo/xml-sitemaps">XML sitemap spec</a>
  to see how this page is discovered.
</p>

Why it matters

Three audiences read internal links differently:

  • Crawlers use them to discover pages and to weight importance. A page linked from the home page is considered more important than one linked only from a deep archive.
  • AI agents and answer engines use anchor text as a strong signal for what the destination is about, often stronger than the destination’s own <title>.
  • Humans scan link text to decide whether the click is worth it.

Internal links are also the easiest SEO lever you fully control. External backlinks are won; internal links are decided.

How to implement

Anchor text is the single most important variable.

  • Use descriptive anchor text. “XML sitemap spec” is good. “Click here” tells the user and the crawler nothing.
  • Vary anchor text naturally. Link the same destination from different pages using slightly different phrasings. Identical anchors on every link looks templated.
  • Link to the canonical URL of the destination, not a redirect. Every link to a redirect costs a hop.
  • Link to topically related content. Each article should link to two to five other relevant pages on the site. A page with zero outbound internal links is an orphan from the crawler’s perspective even if it links inwards.
  • Avoid orphan pages. Every URL in the sitemap should be reachable from at least one other page through normal navigation, not just from the sitemap itself.
  • Keep link depth shallow. Pages more than three clicks from the home page get crawled and updated less often.
  • Cross-link from breadcrumbs. They give crawlers a clean hierarchical view and let users escape upwards.
  • Open in the same tab unless there is a reason. target="_blank" is for downloads and third-party flows, not internal navigation.

Avoid linking inside long lists of navigation that repeat on every page. Those count, but contextual links inside body content carry more weight per link.

Common mistakes

  • “Click here” or “read more” used as the only anchor text in the body.
  • Hundreds of footer links to every page on the site. Dilutes the signal and clutters screen-reader rotors.
  • Linking to staging or preview URLs by accident.
  • Building the entire navigation in JavaScript with no <a href> fallback. Crawlers and screen readers cannot follow it.
  • Pointing internal links at redirect chains created by an old migration.

Verification

  • Crawl the site and check the orphan-pages report. Anything in the sitemap but not reachable through links needs a contextual link added.
  • Use Search Console’s Links report to see the top linked-to pages. The list should match your idea of what is important.
  • Check that anchor text varies and is descriptive — a crawler that exports a list of (anchor, target) pairs tells you a lot in one read.

Related topics

Sources & further reading

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