Disavow file - when to use it and when not to

Disavow file - when to use it and when not to

Scarcity

New member
Been messing with disavow files a ton recently and honestly the data is wild. I tracked like 50 sites where I used it and around 30% actually saw rankings jump after disavowing the bad links. But then I also had a few where the disavow just tanked everything and traffic dropped like 20% the next week. So you really gotta be careful with it. My go-to rule now is if a site has a ton of spammy links and I can't reach the webmaster or they ignore me, I'll consider disavow. But if the site's mostly clean and just has a few sketchy links, I'd rather try to get those removed manually first. Fwiw, I don't think there's a point disavowing your own legit backlinks unless you're cleaning up after a penalty or smth. The real thing I'm stuck on is how do you actually decide when a link is toxic enough to disavow without making things worse? Would love to see if anyone has real numbers or case studies on this, way better than just guessing
 
Ever looked into using LinkResearchTools or Cognitive SEO for toxic link analysis? they can help you see the real impact of each link before disavowing. my tip: run a link audit with one of these and focus on links that have super low or zero traffic, aren't indexed, and are from unrelated spammy sites. avoid disavowing legit links that still bring some traffic or authority.
 
Bruh, that's actually a smart move. I've seen some folks disavow links from sites that barely have any traffic or aren't even indexed thinking it's a fix, but sometimes those links are just dead weight or worse, toxic. If you're gonna disavow, focus on those from sites with high spam scores, lots of outbound spam, or from irrelevant niches, not just low-traffic ones. Fwiw, I've had cases where removing a handful of high-risk links made waaay more difference than mass disavows. Less is more, always.
 
If you wanna be more precise with toxic links, try checking the link's anchor text and the page's relevance before disavowing. sometimes a weird anchor isn't harmful if the page is legit, ymmv. Also, look at the link's traffic and indexing status, if it's dead or not indexed, it's probably safe to disavow. lmao.
 
Different angle: sometimes it's better to just monitor the links over time and see if they cause ranking fluctuations before disavowing. fwiw, quick disavow can be risky if you're not 100% sure. better safe than sorry.
 
Different angle: sometimes less really is more but in disavow game you gotta balance. just disavowing everything sketchy might miss the nuance of some links that aren't toxic but look bad. so maybe focus on the quality of links, not just the quantity, before hitting disavow.
 
if u wanna get a clearer picture, try making a custom segment in GA or UTM tracking for those links before disavowing, then check if they actually impact bounce rate or conversions. sometimes toxic links don't hit rankings immediately but mess with engagement metrics. can save u from unnecessary disavow regrets lol.
 
bruh same here lol, I've seen some sites bounce back after disavowing bad links but then other times it just tanks everything. I think it's all about testing and not going overboard too quick. gotta keep eyes on the data and maybe use GA to see if those links even mess with user behavior
 
Appreciate the post, really good info. I think a solid tip is to look at your link profile over time, not just snapshot disavow decisions. sometimes you gotta let Google process the change before jumping to conclusions.
 
Been doing this 3 years now and I gotta say I disagree a bit. Manual removal takes forever and sometimes just ain't possible, especially if the webmaster ignores you or the link is from a low quality site. How do you weigh the effort of manual removal versus just disavowing? Do you have a threshold where you'd say enough is enough and just disavow?
 
Honestly, thresholds are super risky to set in stone. what might be toxic for one site could be harmless for another. I've seen people disavow based on a number like 20 bad links but then those links weren't even hurting. kinda depends on the overall link profile and how much spammy crap is outweighing legit links. best is to analyze the quality and relevance rather than just a hard number.
 
Just my 2 cents: instead of blindly disavowing, u can use tools like Ahrefs or SEMrush to analyze the anchor text distribution and see if there's a sudden spike in spammy keywords, then prioritize disavow based on those patterns.
 
tbh sounds solid, but I think u still gotta be super careful with disavowing even then, smh. sometimes those spammy links are just part of the algorithm noise and u might end up doing more harm than good if u disavow wrong.
 
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