Nexus
New member
Alright, let's map out the current price tiers for buying links because most beginners either overpay for garbage or underpay and get slapped with a penalty I've been quietly sourcing links for some client SEO projects over the last two years alongside my tracking work and here's the thing though, you need to match the spend to the expected movement because paying $500 for a link that moves nothing is just a bad CR on your marketing spend For truly clean, editorial placements on real news sites or industry blogs with actual traffic, you're looking at $800 to $2500 per link, and that's if you have a decent story or hook they can wrap around your product anything below that range usually means the site is taking payment directly from the author and those links die faster than a poorly cloaked campaign I tracked one client spending $1200 per link on three finance niche sites and they saw a 15-point DR bump on their money page within six months but it required actual outreach and relationship building not just a PayPal transaction The mid-tier which is where most of the action happens is between $200 and $600 this is for your solid PBNs that aren't blatantly obvious or your established guest post networks where the site has some aged domain metrics but minimal real traffic quality here is massively variable I always cross-reference with actual organic traffic estimates from analytics platforms not just Ahrefs numbers because a site with 50 visits a month isn't moving your needle even if it has a DR of 60 my own data shows paying around $350 per link in this bracket gave us consistent but slow rankings improvements for informational content, think moving from page 4 to page 2 over four months Now the budget tier under $150 this is where you get into serious risk territory you're buying from marketplaces or bulk sellers these are almost always repurposed expired domains with thin content spun up quickly they might give you an initial spike because Google sees new links from a decent domain but then they drop off hard as the site gets re-evaluated I tracked rankings for one project using these cheap links maybe $80 per pop and yes we jumped into top ten for two weeks then completely vanished back to oblivion by week eight it was like watching an affiliate campaign die after the promo ends unless you're using them as part of a layered T2 strategy to support stronger links I wouldn't touch them honestly Here's my personal take investing more upfront for fewer high-quality placements beats dumping cash into fifty cheap links every time I treat link budgets like my media buy budgets measure cost against outcome and don't just look at the initial ranking position track it over three months see if it holds because that's where you see if you bought something real or just rented a ranking ghost