Link Reclamation: How to Find and Reclaim Lost Backlinks
Sadly, this happens all the time. Here’s a screenshot of a link to Ahrefs’ Content Explorer in an article by Copy.ai: This is a nice link from a page on a site with a Domain Rating (DR) of 93....

Building links is difficult. Which is why it’s so frustrating when hard-earned links disappear without warning. Sadly, this happens all the time. Here’s a screenshot of a link to Ahrefs’ Content Explorer in an article by Copy.ai: This is a nice link from a page on a site with a Domain Rating (DR) of 93. But take a look at that article now. The link is no more. It’s gone. That would sure be a nice link to reclaim, right? Yes. It would. The same goes for the hundreds of other links we’ve lost in the past couple of months. Which is where link reclamation comes in. Link reclamation is the process of reclaiming lost links. You had a link. You lost it. You want it back. So you take steps to try to reclaim it. What steps, I hear you ask? It depends why you lost the link in the first place. Here are four common reasons for link losses: I’ve starred (*) that last reason because it’s not not technically a lost link. It still exists. But because the page isn’t indexed, it probably isn’t going to be as valuable. Understanding the nuances associated with each “reason” is the key to taking action to reclaim the links. Keep reading to learn how. Here is an unlinked mention: Ahrefs is cited, but there’s no link. You could argue that this should be a link. In which case, attempting to convert this to a linked mention would be a form of link reclamation, right? Before I started writing the original version of this guide back in 2018, I made this exact point to Tim (my boss), to which he responded: Mind. Blown. You can’t reclaim a link you never had in the first place. So this guide is all about reclaiming lost backlinks. But… If this post by Antonio Gabric is to be believed, the answer is yes—and very well. He says he reclaimied 31 backlinks from just 166 outreach emails. That’s an 18.67% conversion rate, which is pretty much unheard of in link outreach these days. But the reality is that results can differ by industry, brand, and how you built or earned the links in the first place. In fact, I think Antonio got such good results because he was clearly attempting to reclaim links built through “win win collaborations.” In other words, they were either paid backlinks or ones acquired through shady tactics like link exchanges: It makes sense to expect the other party to hold up their end of the bargain when a deal is made, so this likely explains Antonio’s stellar results. Still, link reclamation is a simple tactic that’s rarely a big time investment once you have things set up. This can make it well worth doing even if conversation rates are relatively low. Bottom line? As with all link building tactics, you won’t know how well link reclamation works for you until you try it. Follow these two simple steps. Site Explorer > enter your domain > Backlinks > Lost Here you will see all the backlinks you’ve lost during the past 30 days. For ahrefs.com, I see 6,285 lost links. But the reality is that most of those links won’t be worth trying to reclaim. Many will just be junk that weren’t helping you to rank anyway. To find links worth reclaiming, set the “Best links” filter to “Show best links only.” If we do this for Ahrefs.com, 6,285 immediately drops to 594. Sidenote. You can configure “Best links” to filter for whatever types of backlinks you think are best. For example, if you only care about followed links from DR30+ sites with 10K+ monthly organic traffic, you can configure it to filter for only those links. If you’ll only be doing link outreach in a particular language, it’s worth filtering for links from pages in that language too. How you approach reclaiming a lost link will depend on the reason for its loss. Some may not even be worth trying to reclaim at all (more on that in a moment). In Ahrefs, we label every link with a link loss reason: You can also filter by link loss reason: Let’s tackle if and how to handle each reason for link loss. This means the link disappeared from the linking page. Here are three common reasons this can happen: You can use the Page Inspect feature in Ahrefs to figure out which reason it is. Hit “Show changes” next to the link loss reason to bring it up. You should see the HTML of the page before and after the link was removed. Removed sections are highlighted red, and new sections are highlighted green. To quickly scroll to links you may have lost, use the up/down arrows in the search box on the left: For example, here’s a link to our website that was replaced: Here’s how to figure out the reason for the link loss: Sidenote. There are other reasons links can be removed. These are just the common ones. This means the linking page couldn’t be found during our last crawl. There are three reasons this can happen: I would only recommend pursuing these opportunities if you think the page got deleted accidentally. To check if the page was deleted, click to visit the referring page. Here’s one that no longer exists from WPShout: There’s no way of knowing for sure if it was deleted accidentally, but the page having lots of backlinks is usually a sign of this. After all, no sane SEO-savvy website owner would delete such a page without redirecting it. To see how many links the referring page has, hit the caret next to the URL: In this case, the page has backlinks from 109 websites. That’s quite a lot, so it may be worth sending a quick “Hey, Just noticed that your page about ____ is broken. Did you mean to delete it?” email. Looking for a better tactic here? Give broken link building a shot. This is where you create a similar page, then reach out to everyone linking to the dead resource and suggest they replace it with yours. It can work very well if you find a dead page with a lot of good backlinks. This means the linked redirecting URL couldn’t be followed to its “destination” page during the most recent crawl. There are a few reasons this can happen: Sidenote. There’s also the “Dropped” reason, which means the linked redirecting URL was removed from our database. These links almost always still exist and aren’t worth worrying about. Unless any of these things happened by mistake, there’s no link reclamation opportunity to pursue here. These links are reported as lost because of changes made on your website. For example, we recently moved our API documentation. In doing so, we redirected the old URL to the new one. This then gets reported as a lost link. Here’s another example: This time, the declared canonical changed. Our list of SEO agencies in Bulgaria previously canonicalized to the homepage of our SEO agencies directory. I’m not close to this project, but I’m guessing this was because there were no agencies listed in this section so we didn’t want it indexed. Now there are three agencies, so it makes sense to remove the canonical that pointed to the main page and have Google index the actual page: In both of these cases, there’s no link reclamation opportunity because they’re the result of changes we intended to make. The only time there might be a link reclamation opportunity is when redirects are removed by mistake, leading to 404s with backlinks. But, to be honest, it’s much easier to spot these opportunities by filtering the Best by Links report for the most linked dead pages. You can then just redirect them to wherever makes sense. This means the linking page was noindexed since the last crawl. You can verify the presence of this tag with the Ahrefs SEO Toolbar: This is a strange case because your link is probably still on the page itself. It’s just that Google may not count it due to the page being noindexed. If the site owner meant to noindex the page, there’s not much you can do about this. But a lot of people noindex pages by accident. In which case, you might want to reach out and give them a heads up. This can be something as simple as: Hey, Just spotted a “noindex” tag on your page about _______. Not sure if you did this on purpose but if not, you might want to fix it. Adding this tag removes the page from Google. 🙁 Here are two ways to spot accidental noindexing: The reason I say you only might want to reach out is because they’ll probably realize their mistake and fix it eventually without your input. Reaching out may just waste your time. This means the linking page is now specifying another resource as its canonical. You can see the declared canonical using Ahrefs SEO Toolbar: 9 times out of 10, these are nothing to worry about. Common reasons for canonicals include: In all of these instances, your link will still exist (and “count”) at the canonicalized version of the URL. But sometimes, canonicals are indicative of a mistake… For example, the URL this referring page declares as its canonical gives a security warning: That doesn’t look right at all. But here’s the thing: in cases like these, Google is smart enough to realize that it probably shouldn’t respect the canonical. In which case, it will still index the linking page and the link won’t technically be lost. Therefore, there’s rarely any opportunity here. This means the linking page redirected to a different URL during the most recent crawl. Much like canonicals, redirects are rarely worth pursuing. Common reasons for them include: In each of these cases, the redirected URL will usually still link back to your site. But sometimes, pages are deleted and redirected elsewhere. This often leads to a true lost backlink. You can easily check whether this is the case by searching the source code of the final destination URL for yourdomain.com. No results? The redirected page doesn’t link back to you. I would only recommend pursuing these opportunities if: In all other cases where the redirect is irrelevant (e.g., an old blog post redirected to the site homepage), leave it and cut your losses. PRO TIP Want an easy way to check whether the 301/302 redirected pages link back to you? Make a copy of this Google Sheet, then filter the Backlinks report in Ahrefs’ Site Explorer for links lost with the 301/302 redirect status. Next, enter your domain in cell A1 of the sheet labelled “Settings,” then paste the referring pages (from the report export) into column A in the sheet labelled “Redirects.” It will show whether each final redirected URL contains a link back to your site. Further investigate any with the label “Link lost :(” NOTE. This sheet is an edited version of the one created by The Tech SEO here. This means we couldn’t crawl the referring page during our last attempt. Crawl errors can occur for all kinds of reasons. Usually they’re not worth worrying about and the links will reappear during the next successful scheduled crawl. This means we dropped the referring page from our database. It’s very likely that the link is still on the page. We only count them as lost because we’re no longer able to see whether it’s there or not. Here are a few reasons why we might drop a page from our index: Link reclamation isn’t a one-time process. You will lose links all the time for many different reasons. It pays to regularly check for lost links and reclaim any that you can. It may even be wise to re-allocate some of your resources away from link building and towards link reclamation. This is because reclaiming lost links can often be easier, less time-consuming, and ultimately less costly than building new links. My final piece of advice? Pick your battles wisely. Don’t try to reclaim links that were lost for good reason. Pursue those you stand a good chance of reclaiming. For more link building tactics that don’t require new content, check out our list of link building strategies.Link reclamation vs. claiming unlinked brand mentions
Tim’s response via Slack
1. Find lost links with Site Explorer
2. Pick the best opportunities
Link removed — Often worth pursuing
Not found — Sometimes worth pursuing
Broken redirect — Sometimes worth pursuing
Noindex — Probably not worth pursuing
Not canonical anymore — Probably not worth pursuing
301/302 redirect — Probably not worth pursuing
Crawl error — Not worth pursuing
Dropped — Not worth pursuing
Final thoughts