Anchor text is the visible, clickable text of a link. It does two jobs at once: it tells a human what they will get if they click, and it gives search engines a clue about the destination page's topic. Because it is a ranking input, anchor text is also one of the easiest things to over-optimise, which is what turns a useful signal into a genuine risk.
The mistake is treating anchors as a place to stuff target keywords. A natural link profile is built the way real editors link: mostly by brand and URL, sometimes by topic, only occasionally by an exact phrase. The aim is a mix that would look unremarkable to anyone reviewing it, because that is what earned links actually look like.
The anchor types and their role in the mix
The major SEO references, including Moz and Semrush, describe the same set of anchor types. What matters is not memorising the labels but understanding which ones should carry your profile and which should stay rare.
| Anchor type | Example | Role in the mix |
|---|---|---|
| Branded | SEO Backlinks | The backbone, safest, should be the most common |
| Naked URL | seobacklinks.co.uk | Naturally common, signals a real citation |
| Topical / partial | this guide to link building | Adds relevance without looking targeted |
| Generic / natural phrase | read more here, according to the agency | What editors actually write, keeps the profile human |
| Exact-match | buy backlinks uk | Powerful but high-risk, use sparingly if at all |
| Image | (the image's alt text) | Google reads the alt attribute as the anchor |
The over-optimisation risk
Exact-match commercial anchors carry the most ranking weight and the most risk, because real journalists almost never link to you using your precise money keyword. So when a large share of your links all use the same exact phrase, the profile stops looking earned and starts looking bought. This is not a hypothetical: Google's Penguin update, first launched in 2012 and since folded into the core algorithm, specifically targets unnatural link patterns, and aggressive exact-match anchors are a textbook example. The fix is not to ban exact-match entirely, but to keep it rare and let branded, URL and topical anchors carry the profile.
What makes a good anchor
Beyond the mix, the reference sources agree on a few practical rules for any individual anchor. Keep it succinct rather than a full sentence. Make it relevant to the page it points to, so the words genuinely describe the destination. Avoid generic "click here" for every link, since it tells search engines nothing. And make sure a reader can see it is a link. A good anchor is descriptive and natural at the same time, which is exactly why editorial links tend to read well and engineered ones do not.
Why diversity matters
The reference sources are consistent on one point that buyers often miss: a healthy profile is varied. Earned links from many different writers naturally produce many different anchors, so a profile dominated by any single type, even a safe branded one, can look managed rather than organic. The goal is not to hit a published ratio (there is no official Google number) but to end up with the kind of spread that real, unrelated editors would create: lots of branded and URL anchors, a layer of topical and partial-match phrases, the occasional generic "read more", and exact-match kept rare. Diversity is what lets every link read as a genuine editorial choice rather than part of a campaign.
Common mistakes
- Using the same exact-match keyword on every link, the single biggest tell of a built profile.
- Pointing every anchor at the same money page instead of spreading links across relevant URLs.
- Forcing a target keyword into editorial coverage where no journalist would write it that way.
- Ignoring the anchor entirely and letting suppliers default to whatever they like.
How SEO Backlinks approaches this
On every digital PR backlinks campaign you set a preferred anchor and target page, and we balance that against each publication's editorial standards so the link still reads naturally. In practice that means leaning on branded and topical anchors that editors accept and Google trusts, rather than pushing exact-match phrases that get a placement rejected or a profile flagged. Every anchor, with its surrounding copy and target page, is reported in your dashboard so the profile can be reviewed over time. If you are buying links elsewhere, read buying backlinks safely first, and check each opportunity against the backlink quality checklist.
Keep reading
- What makes a good backlink?, where anchors fit the wider picture
- Dofollow vs nofollow, the other half of how a link reads
- Buying backlinks safely, why exact-match buying is risky
- Backlink quality checklist, anchors as one of the checks
- Digital PR backlinks, earned links with natural anchors
FAQs
What is a safe anchor text mix?
There is no exact ratio Google publishes. A natural profile leans heavily on branded and URL anchors, with topical and partial-match phrases next, and exact-match commercial anchors used sparingly. The real test is not a number, it is whether your anchors look like phrases real editors would choose, rather than the same keyword repeated.
Why is too much exact-match anchor text risky?
Real editors rarely link to you using your exact target keyword, so a profile where many links repeat the same money phrase looks built rather than earned. That pattern is one of the clearer signals of manipulated links, and it is what Google's Penguin update, launched in 2012 and now part of the core algorithm, was designed to catch.
Can I choose the anchor for a PR backlink?
Within reason. You set a preferred anchor and target page, and we balance that against what each publication's editorial standards allow, so the link still reads as something a journalist would actually write. Branded and topical anchors clear editorial review far more often than exact-match ones.
Do branded anchors pass SEO value?
Yes. A branded anchor still passes link authority, and it reinforces your brand as a recognised name across the web, which supports both rankings and AI answers. It is the safest anchor type and tends to make up the largest share of a natural profile.
What are the main types of anchor text?
The common types are branded, naked URL, exact-match, partial-match, topical or related, generic phrases like read more, and image alt text. A healthy profile uses several of these, weighted towards branded and URL anchors, rather than relying on any single type.