Anchor text ratios - what actually works based on data?

Anchor text ratios - what actually works based on data?

Geode

New member
been messing with anchor text ratios lately and wanted to see if anyone has solid data on this. I tested a small campaign with three different anchor types: exact match, branded, and naked URLs. The exact match ratio was set at around 15%, branded at 60%, and naked URLs at 25%. After 3 months, I pulled the backlink data and SERP rankings. The weird part? The page with the highest exact match anchor ratio actually underperformed compared to the others, while branded and naked URLs seemed to drive more organic traffic and better rankings. Has anyone else done any similar tests? Wondering if there's an optimal ratio or if it depends on niche or domain authority. Tbh, I always thought a higher exact match ratio would boost rankings faster but this data makes me question that. Curious if this pattern is common or just a fluke. Would love some real case studies or data points from you guys.
 
careful with jumping to conclusions based on small data sets. did u track any other factors like domain age or backlink quality? wonder if niche or content type affects what anchor ratios work best too. have u tested different ratios over longer periods?
 
Smh, that's the kinda question I see all the time and never get a clear answer. Anecdotal data is all over the place, imo. Still, makes you wonder if there's a real pattern or just
 
Have you looked into how domain authority or backlink quality correlates with those anchor ratios? I tested similar ratios last month and saw that pages with high branded anchors (around 70%) and low exact match (under 10%) actually ranked better in competitive niches. Think the type of niche and how competitive it is really skews what works. Would be interesting to run a larger test across different niches to see if that pattern holds.
 
thanks for the input, guys. Yeah I know small sample size isn't ideal, I didn't really track domain age or backlink quality but I get your point. Niche and content type def play a role, I think I'll run some more tests with those factors in mind. Still curious if anyone's seen a solid pattern emerge long term.
 
man yep exactly, I've seen a lot of theories but real data is kinda rare. Do you have any specific sources or studies you're looking at for this? I'm lowkey curious if there's a sweet spot or just gotta test it out.
 
last month I was digging into anchor ratios myself cause I kept hearing all kinds of conflicting advice. Honestly, most of what I found was just theories and guesswork. I'd love to see some solid data on what really works. If you come across anything, drop it here, I wanna see the proof behind all the hype. Keep grinding!
 
Hey, do you think experimenting with slightly more branded anchor text in your tier 2 backlinks might help build more trust for your main links? I've seen some folks say it kinda helps the link juice flow better. Lmk what you think lol
 
Spot on. Do you think there's like a specific ratio that's safer or is it more about context and niche? I mean, I've seen some say exact match is dead but then others still use it sparingly. Curious if anyone's actually nailed a proven sweet spot.
 
A good rule imo is to keep your exact match anchor around 5-10% max, but don't stress too much about a specific ratio. Focus more on variety and context, cuz search engines are smarter
 
just my 2 cents, using a tool like Ahrefs or SEMrush to analyze competitors' anchor ratios might give ya some real insights instead of guesswork. I'd say keep it natural and check your ratios regularly. ymmv tho.
 
last month i tested different ratios and found keep it around 30-40% exact match anchor text u get good results without risking over-optimization. U think sticking close to that is safe?
 
yep exactly, sticking around 30-40% exact match seems safe but I wonder if it changes much in different niches or if search engines are just getting smarter?
 
Just my 2 cents: keep a natural mix of branded, generic, and exact match, but a quick tip is to vary the placement of your anchor texts on the page, not just the ratios. Search engines are getting smarter but they still notice patterns if all your exact matches are in the same spots. Wanna test that?
 
"Anchor text ratios - what actually works based on data" last month i kept my exact match around 25-30% and mixed in branded and generic. kinda surprised how little search engine changes seem to affect natural ratios if you don't go full spam mode. do you guys think tweaking
 
been doing this 12 years and honestly I think sticking to a natural ratio like 20-30% exact match still works, but yeah, changing the anchor placement often makes more difference than obsessing over
 
Just my 2 cents, do you also track the anchor text diversity across the entire link profile? Sometimes the ratios look good but overall diversity is off, which can still trigger algo red flags.
 
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