Backlink Profile Dashboard

Paste CSV data (domain, authority score, link type) to visualize your backlink profile with charts and tables.

CSV Input (domain, authority, type)
Parse Preview
Paste CSV data above then click "Import & Visualize".

How to Use the Backlink Profile Dashboard

  1. Prepare your CSV — export backlink data from Ahrefs, SEMrush, Moz, or any SEO tool. The tool expects three columns: domain (referring domain), authority (numeric DA/DR/AS score, 0–100), and type (dofollow, nofollow, or sponsored).
  2. Paste the CSV — click "Try Example" to see the format, or paste your own data into the input area.
  3. Click Import & Visualize — the dashboard will parse your CSV, calculate statistics, and render distribution charts.
  4. Switch to Visualize — use the option chips to jump directly to charts and the top-domains table.
  5. Export — download cleaned CSV or JSON, or copy to clipboard for use in spreadsheets.

Understanding Your Backlink Profile

A backlink profile is the complete picture of all external links pointing to your website. Search engines like Google use backlinks as one of their strongest ranking signals — links from authoritative, relevant sites signal that your content is trustworthy and worth ranking. However, not all backlinks are created equal. A single link from a high-authority domain (DA 80+) can outweigh hundreds of links from low-authority spam sites.

Domain Authority Distribution

The DA distribution chart breaks your backlinks into five buckets: Low (0–20), Below Average (21–40), Average (41–60), Good (61–80), and Excellent (81–100). A healthy profile for a mature site typically has a bell curve slightly skewed toward the higher end. If most of your links come from low-DA domains, it may indicate link spam or an early-stage site that has not yet earned editorial links from authoritative sources. Over time, as you publish high-quality content and earn mentions from industry publications and directories, your DA distribution will shift right.

Link Type Analysis

The link type breakdown distinguishes dofollow links (which pass PageRank and directly influence rankings) from nofollow links (which historically did not, though Google now treats the attribute as a hint). A natural backlink profile contains a mix of both — typically 60–70% dofollow and 30–40% nofollow. A profile with 100% dofollow links can look manipulated to search engines, suggesting paid links or link schemes. Sponsored links use rel="sponsored" to disclose paid placements, and UGC (User Generated Content) links come from comments, forums, and community posts.

Top Referring Domains

The top referring domains table ranks backlinks by authority score, showing which high-value sites link to you. When analyzing this list, look for: domain relevance (links from topically related sites carry more weight than random links), link placement (editorial links in body content are stronger than footer or sidebar links), and link velocity (a sudden spike in new high-DA links can look unnatural). Use this table to identify your strongest link-building wins and to prioritize future outreach targets.

Exporting and Sharing Data

The Export panel lets you download your parsed and cleaned backlink data as CSV (for spreadsheets) or JSON (for programmatic use). This is useful for tracking changes over time, sharing with teammates, or importing into other SEO workflows. Since this tool runs entirely in your browser, your data stays private — it is never sent to a server or stored anywhere outside your local machine.

Related SEO Tools

For a complete SEO workflow, pair this dashboard with our Meta Tag Generator to optimize on-page SEO, the SERP Preview to see how your pages appear in search results, and the Canonical Checker to ensure your canonicals are correctly configured. Building a strong backlink profile is one of the most effective long-term SEO strategies — focus on earning links naturally through high-quality content, original research, and genuine relationships with other site owners in your niche.

Frequently Asked Questions

A backlink profile is the complete collection of external links pointing to your website. It includes the number of links, the domain authority of linking sites, the anchor text used, and whether links are dofollow or nofollow. A healthy backlink profile has links from high-authority, relevant domains using varied, natural anchor text.
The tool expects a CSV with three columns: domain (the referring domain), authority (a numeric score from 0–100), and type (dofollow, nofollow, or sponsored). A header row is optional. Example row: example.com,45,dofollow
Domain Authority (DA) is a search engine ranking score that predicts how likely a website is to rank in search results. It scores on a logarithmic scale from 1 to 100. Tools like Ahrefs (Domain Rating), SEMrush (Authority Score), and Moz (Domain Authority) each have their own metrics but all measure similar concepts of site credibility.
A dofollow link passes PageRank (link equity) from the linking site to your site, directly contributing to your search rankings. A nofollow link includes rel="nofollow" and historically passed no link equity. Nofollow links still drive referral traffic and add diversity to your backlink profile. A natural profile contains a mix of both.
No. This tool runs 100% in your browser. Your CSV data is parsed locally using JavaScript and never transmitted to any server. There is no storage, no logging, and no data collection of any kind.