A guest post is an article you write (or commission) for someone else's site, usually with a link back to yours inside it. PR backlinks are links you earn by being quoted, featured or cited in genuine press coverage. Both put a link on a third-party site, but they get there in very different ways, and that difference is what decides how much each one is worth.
Short answer on which to choose: if you want predictability and control over the exact wording, guest posts have a place. If you want authority, brand visibility and links that a competitor cannot copy off a vendor list, lead with PR backlinks. Most brands are better served putting PR at the core and using guest posts sparingly, if at all.
The case for guest posts
Guest posting is appealing because it is controllable. You choose the site, you write the article, you decide the anchor and the target page. On a relevant, well-run blog with real readers, a useful guest article can support a topic and send a little qualified traffic. The model only works when the host site would have been happy to publish your piece without a link attached. The moment the link is the entire reason the post exists, the value drains out of it.
Where guest posts fall down
Most of the guest-post market is built around sites that exist to sell placements. Those leave a footprint: templated posts, irrelevant topics jammed together, author bios with no real person behind them, and the same link sold to dozens of buyers. Google has been explicit that large-scale guest posting done mainly for links is link spam. A handful of genuine contributions are fine; a programme of bought posts is the kind of thing that gets discounted quietly.
| Factor | Guest posts | PR backlinks |
|---|---|---|
| Risk | Higher; scaled buying drifts into link spam | Low; links are earned inside real coverage |
| Speed | Fast once a site is agreed | 10 to 21 days per story |
| Relevance | Good if you pick the site carefully | From the publication and the story angle |
| Cost | Cheap per link, but cheap usually means risky | Roughly £400 to £500 per placement |
| Longevity | Mixed; depends on the host site's stability | Permanent editorial placements |
| Brand benefit | Small; few people read paid guest posts | Real coverage builds recognition and trust |
How to use guest posts sensibly
If you do run guest posts, treat them as content first and links second. Pick sites you would be proud to be associated with, write something genuinely worth reading, keep anchors natural, and never buy posts in bulk from a marketplace. Used like that, an occasional guest post can fill a gap. Used as a volume tactic, it becomes the kind of link that drags on trust rather than building it.
How SEO Backlinks approaches this
We do not sell guest posts. We lead with PR backlinks earned through reactive commentary and data-led digital PR, because editorial coverage combines link authority with brand context in a way bought posts cannot. If you want the full picture from the other direction, our companion piece on PR backlinks vs guest posts leads from the PR side. To weigh it against your own targets, book a call.
Keep reading
- PR backlinks, our core editorial link service
- PR backlinks vs guest posts, the same comparison from the PR side
- Editorial backlinks, why context beats placement
- Buying backlinks safely, staying inside Google's policies
- Guest posting services, what to look for if you go that route
FAQs
Are guest posts against Google's guidelines?
Guest posting itself is fine. What breaches Google's policies is guest posting at scale primarily to build links, especially when the post is thin, the site exists to sell placements, or the link passes ranking credit in exchange for payment. A genuinely useful article on a relevant site is a different thing entirely.
Do you sell guest posts?
No. We do not sell guest posts, niche edits or link insertions as products. We lead with PR backlinks earned through real press coverage. If a guest post genuinely fits your goals, we will say so, but it is not what we put at the centre of a campaign.
Which is more authoritative?
PR backlinks usually, because the link sits inside coverage on a publication with real editorial standards and readers, often DR 70+. A guest post on a mid-tier blog can still help if it is relevant and well written, but it rarely carries the same weight or brand benefit.
Are guest posts cheaper?
Per link they often look cheaper, which is part of the appeal. The catch is that the cheapest guest posts come from sites that exist to sell them, and those are the ones most likely to be discounted or penalised. Cheap and safe rarely overlap here.