I’ve been thinking about buying backlinks from Fiverr to improve my site’s SEO. Has anyone tried this? Is it worth the money?
You can buy them, but most are pretty bad. Even sellers with great reviews might give you low-quality links from private blog networks. These links usually don’t help you rank, and most people don’t realise how bad they are.
@Layla
Thanks for the heads-up. Can you suggest better methods or alternatives?
Charlotte said:
@Layla
Thanks for the heads-up. Can you suggest better methods or alternatives?
You could hire someone to manually create local citations for you; that might be useful. But be careful—most of the links on Fiverr are terrible, and you probably won’t get a refund if things go wrong.
Yes, you can buy them, but should you? Be cautious. Fiverr has a bad reputation for this kind of thing. Avoid links that seem too good to be true.
“When old backlinks don’t make money anymore, we throw them on Fiverr. It’s like selling worn-out ropes that people keep buying.”
I can’t believe anyone thinks Google can be fooled by buying thousands of backlinks for $5. Do you really think you’re the only one smart enough to find this deal?
If you want your site to disappear from search rankings, go ahead.
You can, but do your homework first.
Anyone know the best way to get travel site backlinks?
No need to buy them; most are from PBN sites. If you want, I can share data on good dofollow links.
You could buy them if you know what you’re doing. Some links might work as citations if done right. Just keep in mind most will be low-quality, and some might not even be clickable.
You can buy them, but most are spammy and irrelevant. Look for better strategies instead.
Stay away from those links. They’re usually useless PBNs.
It’s all about finding the right sellers.
J.cole4 said:
It’s all about finding the right sellers.
Can you recommend anyone? I’m worried about wasting money on low-quality backlinks.
J.cole4 said:
It’s all about finding the right sellers.
Can you recommend anyone? I’m worried about wasting money on low-quality backlinks.
Don’t fall for it. Most sellers don’t care about your site—they just want your money. Backlinks won’t help if your website has other issues, like poor content or bad user experience. Fix those first.
@KarmaCrafter
What about those offering .gov and .edu backlinks?
LillyGrace said:
@KarmaCrafter
What about those offering .gov and .edu backlinks?
Those are usually scams too. Think about it—are you giving them specifics about what kind of links you need or which pages to target? If your content isn’t better than your competitors’, backlinks won’t save you. Focus on improving your site first.