Pricing

Link Insert Pricing

Link inserts — also called niche edits — place your URL inside existing, aged content that's already ranked and indexed. Faster authority transfer than new content.

Standard
$150/link

Aged, indexed content with proven ranking history.

  • DR 40–55 page
  • 2+ years of index history
  • Real organic traffic required
  • Contextual do-follow placement
  • Live within 14 days
  • 90-day guarantee
Order inserts
PremiumMost Popular
$280/link

Higher-authority pages with stronger ranking signals.

  • DR 55–70 page
  • 3+ years of index history
  • Verified monthly organic traffic
  • Contextual placement in relevant section
  • Live within 14 days
  • 90-day guarantee
Order premium
Authority
$500+/link

Elite insertions on high-DR, high-traffic authority pages.

  • DR 70+ page
  • 5+ years of index history
  • 10K+ monthly traffic verified
  • Prominent contextual placement
  • Live within 21 days
  • 90-day guarantee
Get a quote
Always included

What's included in every plan

Regardless of which package you choose, these standards apply to every single placement.

  • Target page must have real organic traffic — no traffic, no placement
  • 2+ years of index history required
  • Contextual link placement — surrounded by semantically relevant content
  • No marketplace or automated link farms
  • Direct outreach to site owners — no intermediaries
  • Live URL confirmation within 7 days of placement
  • Index verification before marking as complete
  • 90-day replacement guarantee on every insertion
FAQ

Link Insert Pricinganswered

A guest post is a new article published on a site. A link insert places your URL in an existing article that's already indexed and ranking. Link inserts transfer authority faster because the page already has Google's trust.
You can specify topic preferences and we'll select contextually relevant pages. You approve the specific page before we make contact with the publisher.
Most insertions are crawled and confirmed within 7–14 days. Google typically re-crawls high-traffic pages quickly after updates.
Paid link insertions are technically against Google's guidelines, as are most forms of link building. That's why quality and editorial relevance matter — natural-looking contextual links in relevant content carry far less risk than obvious paid placements.