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The Complete 7-Step Guide for Competitor Backlink Analysis: (How AI Search Changes the Game)

Competitor backlink analysis dashboard showing SEO metrics, referring domains, backlink growth, and link-building opportunities for competitor research.

Competitor backlink analysis helps identify valuable referring domains, benchmark your SEO strategy, and uncover new link-building opportunities to improve search rankings.

Competitor backlink analysis is the process of studying the inbound links pointing to a rival’s website to find link-building opportunities, benchmark your own backlink profile, and spot weaknesses you can exploit. The core workflow: identify your real competitors, run their domains through a backlink checker, compare referring domains against your own (a “gap analysis”), then reach out to the sites already willing to link to sites like yours.

That’s the one-paragraph version. Below is the full playbook — including a step Loganix and most other guides on this topic skip entirely: what backlinks actually do (and don’t do) for your visibility inside ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews.

Backlinks have been the backbone of Google rankings for two decades, and that hasn’t changed. What has changed is the size of the game: search behavior is splitting between people who click through ten blue links and people who never leave an AI-generated answer.

That split matters for how you should read this whole guide:

The practical takeaway: competitor backlink analysis is no longer just “how do I outrank them on Google.” It’s “how do I understand the trust signals — links, mentions, and citation-worthy structure — that are already working for them,” and then build a plan that captures all three.

Competitor backlinks are the inbound links pointing to any website Google (or an AI engine) treats as your rival in search results — guest posts, niche edits, brand mentions, directory listings, PR placements, and more, both dofollow and nofollow.

Competitor backlink analysis is the practice of running those domains through a backlink checker, then reviewing referring domain count, authority scores, anchor text patterns, and link types to find replicable opportunities.

One clarification worth making early: “competitor” doesn’t just mean a company in your industry. It means any page Google ranks against you for a keyword you care about — which is why segmenting competitors correctly (see Step 2) matters more than most guides admit.

The 7-Step Process

Step 1: Build your keyword list first

You can’t identify competitors without first knowing the terms you’re actually competing on. Pull your priority keyword list from whatever rank tracker or keyword tool you already use, and note:

This list becomes the input for every later step — including which competitors are worth analyzing at all.

Step 2: Identify and segment your competitors

Not every site that outranks you is worth analyzing the same way. Split them into two buckets:

Domain-level competitors — sites that compete with you across your whole niche and target overlapping keyword sets broadly (e.g., two backlink marketplaces competing for “guest posting service” and a dozen related terms). Their entire backlink profile is relevant.

Page-level competitors — sites that aren’t in your industry at all but happen to have one page ranking for a shared keyword. You only care about that single URL’s backlinks, not the rest of their site.

Most SEO tools (Ahrefs’ Organic Competitors report, Semrush’s Backlink Gap tool, or a simple related: search) will surface a candidate list — but you still need to manually sort it into these two buckets, or your gap analysis in Step 5 will be noisy and misleading.

Tool choice affects the completeness of your analysis, so it’s worth being specific instead of just naming “Ahrefs or Semrush” and moving on.

ToolBacklink index (2026)Best forWatch out for
Ahrefs~35 trillion links, ~494-500M referring domainsDeepest link-level detail, broken-link discovery, historical data back to 2013Premium add-ons get expensive fast
Semrush~43 trillion links, ~390M referring domainsBacklink Gap tool (5 competitors side by side), toxic-link detection, bundled keyword/content toolsSlightly slower link discovery than Ahrefs
MozSmaller indexBeginners, simple Domain Authority checksLess depth for competitive/link-building work
SE Ranking / SerpstatMid-size indexFreelancers and small agencies on tighter budgetsSmaller database for niche/low-authority domains
Google Search ConsoleYour own site onlyGround-truth check of what Google actually sees linking to youDoesn’t cover competitor domains

If you’re doing this regularly, running Ahrefs for link discovery and Semrush for gap analysis and toxic-link auditing is a common combination — the two databases don’t fully overlap, so cross-checking catches more opportunities than either alone.

Step 4: Run the domain-level analysis

For each domain-level competitor, pull:

Velocity is the one metric most older guides skip, and it’s arguably the most actionable: a competitor gaining 40 new referring domains a month is running an active outreach or digital PR program you can reverse-engineer right now, not a historical profile you’re just cataloguing.

This is where the real opportunities surface. Enter your domain plus 3-5 competitors into a gap-analysis tool and look for:

Prioritize “best opportunities” domains that appear across 2+ competitors — they’ve already shown willingness to link to businesses like yours, which lowers your outreach friction considerably.

Step 6: Qualify before you pursue

Not every backlink opportunity is worth chasing. Before adding a domain to your outreach list, check:

Step 7: Build the replication plan

Turn your qualified list into an actual outreach campaign:

  1. Group targets by outreach type (guest post pitch, broken-link replacement, resource-page addition, HARO-style expert quote, etc.)
  2. Draft personalized pitches referencing the specific competitor content they already linked to
  3. Track response rates by outreach type so you can double down on what’s converting
  4. Set a monthly cadence — competitor backlink analysis isn’t a one-time audit, since competitor profiles shift monthly

If you’re only optimizing for Google’s ten blue links, you’re optimizing for a shrinking share of discovery. AI-driven search traffic has been growing far faster than traditional search traffic through 2025-2026, which means competitor analysis increasingly needs a second lens.

Here’s the distinction worth building into your strategy:

Practically, this means your competitor research should now include one extra check: run your priority keywords through ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews and note whose content gets cited. If a competitor with a modest backlink profile is showing up in AI answers where you aren’t, the fix usually isn’t more links — it’s restructuring your content into clearer, answer-first sections (which is exactly why this guide leads with a “Quick answer” box and closes with an FAQ section below).

Common Mistakes to Avoid


Related article: Core Link Building Types That Actually Move Rankings in 2026

FAQ

How many backlinks do I need to outrank a competitor? There’s no fixed number — it depends on the competitiveness of your niche and keyword. What the data shows consistently is a threshold effect: you need enough referring domains to be competitive at all, but beyond that threshold, relevance and content quality matter more than additional link volume.

Is Ahrefs or Semrush better for competitor backlink analysis? Ahrefs generally has the edge for pure backlink depth and discovery speed; Semrush’s Backlink Gap tool and bundled toxic-link auditing make it stronger for ongoing competitive workflows. Many teams run both.

Do backlinks still matter with AI Overviews and ChatGPT around? Yes — they still drive traditional rankings, and ranking well remains one pathway into AI citations. But they’re no longer the only signal; content structure and direct-answer clarity now carry independent weight in whether AI engines cite you.

What’s the difference between domain-level and page-level competitors? Domain-level competitors compete with you across your whole niche and keyword set. Page-level competitors only rank against you on individual keywords via a single page, despite operating in an unrelated industry — only that one URL’s backlinks matter.

How often should I run competitor backlink analysis? Quarterly at minimum for a stable niche; monthly if you’re in an actively competitive space or tracking a specific rival’s outreach campaign.

Finding the gap is the easy part — closing it is where most in-house teams stall out, because manual outreach at scale is slow and inconsistent.

That’s where iCopify’s guest posting and link building marketplace comes in: once you’ve identified the referring domains and content types your competitors are winning links from, our vetted publisher network lets you go straight from “opportunity list” to “live placement” — without months of cold outreach.

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