15 Unique Ways to Check Competitor Website Traffic
Before we dive in, let’s set the right expectations: no tool will give you your competitor’s exact traffic data. However, it’s still well enough to see what works for them, copy their best ideas, or set realistic benchmarks. We’ll...
You only need three tools to get sixteen highly actionable data points on your competitors’ traffic. Before we dive in, let’s set the right expectations: no tool will give you your competitor’s exact traffic data. However, it’s still well enough to see what works for them, copy their best ideas, or set realistic benchmarks. We’ll cover: With these tools and insights, you’ll be well-equipped to understand and outperform your competitors’ website traffic. We’ll start with organic search traffic — the source on which you’ll get the most data. Organic search traffic refers to the clicks a site gets from search engines, excluding search ads. There’s a lot you can tell about your competitors’ organic traffic and a lot you can tell from it. Here are my favorite twelve use cases with detailed instructions. You can check that in seconds for free, right now: The tool will also show you where in the world the traffic is coming from, some of the top pages and keywords, and traffic value (i.e., the value of the organic search traffic, if it were to be acquired via PPC in Google Ads). Organic competitors are the sites that compete with you for the same organic keywords in search engines. Typically, you’ll have more organic competitors than your regular direct business competitors. For example, a 3D printer manufacturer may be competing for a fair share of keywords with a 3D printing magazine — completely different businesses, same keywords. So by rounding up your top organic competitors, you gain a bigger pool of keyword ideas you can potentially target. Much bigger than if you’d just take into account your direct competitors. Here’s how to identify all organic competitors. From there, you can look at the common keywords to see where they outrank you or click on Competitor’s keywords to see keywords you don’t rank for but they do (a.k.a. your content gap). If your competitor is doing SEO, typically their blog will attract most of their organic traffic. But this is not always the case. They may have found other ways of getting clicks from Google, like free tools or free resources, and you could do the same. For example, someone analyzing our site could see that our free writing tools get more organic traffic than years of writing on the blog. To see your competitor’s top performing pages: The first use case here is targeting the same keywords as their top pages to channel some of that traffic your way. There’s more. You can use the report to see which pages contributed to an uptrend or downtrend in your competitor’s traffic. Or, focus on top-performing pages and use the Compare pages view to see when those pages started to pick up traffic. Now to see what the competitors did to improve the pages, click on the caret next to the page and click Inspect. Then choose the date on the calendar and view changes made to the text in that time. If you’re already doing SEO or considering it, seeing a list of your competitors’ keywords is almost like they’ve shared their keyword research with you. You can use keyword data to find: To see your competitors’ keywords: For example, you can track the ranking history of your competitor’s top traffic-generating keywords. If you see sudden spikes, it likely means they’ve updated the content to increase ranking. By using the calendar feature mentioned above, you can learn how they did it. One of the best ways to find organic traffic you’re potentially missing out on is to do a content gap analysis. In SEO, it means identifying the keywords that your competitors rank for but you don’t. Some of those keywords can make perfect topics for you to cover. In Ahefs, you can do a content gap analysis automatically: Toggle Main positions to exclude your competitors’ rankings in SERP features like “Top stories” and “Image packs.” Now look through the report and identify keywords that are relevant for your site. The volume column will show you which keywords are likely to send the most traffic. Short-term organic traffic performance can inform you of the latest developments in your competitors’ rankings (say, within the last 24 hours to a couple of weeks). For example, you can observe the impact of the latest Google Update on their site, see how much traffic they gained or lost last month, or check if any of their newly launched pages are already picking up traffic. To see short-term organic traffic performance: This will adjust the top-level metrics and traffic by location panel and show you the changes over the specified period. You can go as deep as day-to-day traffic changes — a very helpful thing if you want to see Google’s update impact on your competitors’ traffic. Date comparison is available in multiple tools and reports across Ahrefs. As for long-term traffic performance, this allows to set a traffic goal to match or overtake your competitor’s traffic, and plan your budget based on competitor’s performance. You can also use it to forecast your competitors’ traffic. To see long-term traffic performance: Seeing multiple sites on one graph is useful if you want to identify the leader in your niche, compare your site to a few competitors simultaneously, and determine if you are catching up to the leader or if someone is catching up to you. Here’s how: Organic share of voice (SOV) is an SEO metric that shows how much traffic goes to your pages compared to competitors’. In other words, if you want to see your overall organic search traffic share in the market, and eventually increase it, this is the metric you’d want to use. SOV is based on tracked keywords, so you first need to add them to the tool. These can be keywords you target on your blog, your product pages, or even all of your important keywords together. Once you finish the set-up, you will be able to see and regularly track SOV in the Competitors Overview section in Rank Tracker. One of the ways your competitors could be getting traffic is from links from other sites (a.k.a. referral traffic). Knowing who links to your competitors allows you to pursue the same or similar links which can help you not only get more referral traffic but also boost your SEO and increase your brand awareness. To find pages with a high probability of sending traffic to your competitors, look for backlinks from pages with significant organic traffic. Here’s how: From there you can use the Referring page title filter to see only reviews or rankings where you could be listed, too. Simply add in words like “vs, review, tool, tools, top” as a way to identify these pages. Here’s an example of such a page: Another way to analyze your competitors’ traffic is to treat them as one entity. This allows you to: For this, use the Portfolios feature in Ahrefs. The image below shows aggregated data for four sites, including organic traffic and paid traffic (from Google Search Ads). Here’s how to set it up: Paid search traffic refers to the clicks a site gets from search ads on search engine result pages. Here’s how to check your competitors’s paid search traffic and how to use that knowledge to your advantage. If you’re running search ads, checking out your competitors’ paid keywords can give you ready-made keyword research. This lets you see which keywords are working for them and helps you fine-tune your own ad strategy to target those high-performing keywords. What’s more, you can reveal paid search data Google Keyword Planner hides by default: search volume for a particular keyword instead of a search volume range for a group of keywords. And even if you’re not investing in ads, this info can still be super useful. It usually means these keywords are important to your competitors because they know these keywords bring in customers. Chances are, these keywords could be important for your business, too. To find your competitors’ paid keywords: From here, you can use filters to find keywords that meet your CPC, traffic, or relevance criteria, and sort the data to see the keywords which bring the most traffic. Notice the Paid/organic traffic share bar. If you see both blue and yellow color, that means your competitor has invested in the keyword twice (through content and ads) and is trying to get as much SERP real estate as possible — consider pursuing these keywords as well. Another way to gauge a keyword’s importance is to look at its ad position history. A long and consistent history suggests it’s likely a valuable ‘money’ keyword, while a short history might indicate your competitor is just experimenting with it. Want to check out their ad copy and landing pages? Head to the Ads report. You can set the location where your competitor runs their ads and see the landing pages and keywords associated with each ad. Interested to see how much your competitors spend to get all of that paid traffic? Use this data to set a benchmark for traffic performance relative to ad spend and to negotiate the budget for your campaigns. If you’re interested in the overall competitor traffic performance, here’s where to look. To get a quick answer to how much traffic your competitors get overall (from all traffic sources), you can get that information for free with Similarweb. Once you set up a free account, simply go to Website analysis > Website performance report. Arguably, the best way to use Similarweb is in comparison mode. This approach ensures that the data is directionally accurate: whether the data is overestimated or underestimated, it is consistently so across all sites. By comparing your traffic with your competitors, you can identify the relative differences that set you apart. Similarweb is not the only tool with general traffic insights. Another one is Sparktoro, an audience research tool. What’s great about Sparktoro is that its data and functionality revolve around the users behind the clicks. So you can use Similarweb to understand how popular the site is and then Sparktoro to get to know the people who visit it. Take that data and use it for persona development, fine-tuning your messaging, and looking up influencers to partner with or sites to advertise on. Simply set up an account at Sparktoro and type your competitor’s domain in the search bar. Make sure the “Visit the website” mode is on. From there go to: Depending on the tool, the data on your competitors will mostly come from: This means that, in most cases, the data is estimated instead of actual data taken from your competitors and handed over to you. So, when it comes to the data’s accuracy, you should expect a blend of estimated accuracy and directional accuracy. Despite best efforts, the data will be approximated and designed to give you an idea of relative performance because there’s no other way. This also means that if you’re interested in a particular type of traffic, say traffic from search engines, it’s probably best to get a dedicated tool for that. You’ll get access to bigger data sets and more capable functionality, allowing you to do more. Want to go deeper into competitor analysis? Check out our other guides to go beyond traffic data:How to analyze competitor organic search traffic
How to analyze competitor paid search traffic
How to analyze other traffic sources
Where does the data come from? Is it accurate?
Final thoughts