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ahrefs metrics

Ahrefs.com Report Link Metrics

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ahrefs metrics

This is a simple definition of every link metric for Ahrefs.com reports. These are the metrics you get when exporting links in a csv file through “Raw Data Export” (Ahrefs.com site explorer). Ahrefs changes their metrics and names over time so I’ll try to keep this page updated. Most recently a new metric called “Ahrefs Domain Rank” (ADR) was added. I have also updated several of the metrics’ labels for 2015 from their previous 2014 names.

Page last updated Sept 18, 2015.

 

Ahrefs Backlink Metrics

Index – Link number on the ahrefs backlink report (not a backlink metric). This is a legacy metric no longer included on most Ahrefs reports. 

URL Rating (UR) – Ahrefs URL Rating (replacing what was formerly called Ahrefs Rank or AR) is a purely mathematical equivalent of the now retired Google ‘Page Rank’ metric, also similar to the ‘Power’ metric from Link Research Tools. URL Rating is specific to URL and is based on the number of links to that page and relative strength of each of those linking pages. UR also accounts for how multiple outbound links will proportionally dilute the strength of any linking page to the URL in question. The UR scale goes from 0 to 100 (though no URL is actually 100).

For SEO purposes, be aware that since it is purely a mathematical measure, it does not account for how different link types may actually be weighed differently (in Google) such as being based on link or page type, relevance, location on the page, etc… Learn more about URL rating on the the ahrefs FAQ page.

Note that URL rating was also called “URL Rank” on their older PDF reports.

Domain Rating (ADR) – Ahrefs Domain Rating (replacing what was formerly called Domain Rank) is essentially the URL Rating of the domain as a whole including all subpages. It’s not clear how the scale works as a whole but the #1 linked site, facebook, has a ADR of 100 and seems to set this maximum value on the scale. By comparision, the #2, twitter, has an ADR of 98, while Google.com, at #8, has an ADR of 92. 

Ip From – IP address of the website/domain.

Referring Page URL / UrlFrom – URL address/page the backlink is located on.

Referring Page Title – Title of the page the backlink is on.

Internal Links Count / LinksInternal – Number of internal links (pointing within the site) on the page.

External Links Count / LinksExternal – Number of external links on the page (pointing off of the site).

Last HTTP Code – Page http error code when last crawled by ahrefs. This is a legacy metric no longer included on most Ahrefs reports. 

Link URL / UrlTo – URL address the backlink points to.

Size – Size of the page in bytes. 

TextPre – Text just preceding the link.

Link Anchor – html anchor text phrase of the link.

TextPost – Text just after the link.

Last Checked / Visited – Latest date the page was crawled by ahrefs.

Ordinal – Order number of specified link on the page relative to other links (in the html code, not necessarily visually).

First Seen – Date the link was first seen on the page by ahrefs.

Previously Visited – Previous crawl date from ahrefs (could have been before the link existed).

Last Check – The latest date ahrefs has crawled the page to update their index.

Day Lost – The date ahrefs detected the link was lost (now dead link).

Type – Link type (text, canonical, redirect, frame, etc…)

NoFollow – Is the link nofollow? (true/false)

Image – Is the link an image? (true/false)

Site-wide – Is the link on every page of the site, e.g. header/footer/sidebar? (true/false)

Alt – Alt tag of the link (usually for images).

 

ahrefs link report metrics


 

Why the Guide?

Years ago when I was new to Ahrefs I searched all over for a simple guide that would explain all the link metrics but apparently there were none on the internet so I wrote my own (originally for my own reference). Most of these should be obvious but some of them are not. I don’t know why Ahrefs.com doesn’t have a guide like this on their site since not all their metrics are immediately oblivious from their names. I had to ask their support what “ordinal” meant. Also note that Rewind SEO has no affiliation with ahrefs.com except, obviously, as a subscriber to their awesome link index!

About Daniel Delos

Daniel is the founder of Rewind SEO and has worked on hundreds of Google penalty analyses and recovery projects, recovering both manual and algorithm penalties over the past two years. He has over 4 years of experience in SEO and is familiar with just about every White Hat, Black Hat, and 'Gray Hat' method to date.

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  • Alain Sadon

    Hi Daniel, thanks a lot for your nice list of ahrefs metrics.

    My question: nowhere on the net (including the ahrefs documentation) I read that the url rating and domain rating is a linear scale based on the percentage of link juice. Could you please give me more info on this?

    Thanks a lot!

    Alain

    • Hi Alain, good question. Formerly that was how the ‘Ahrefs Rank’ metric was explained in detail by Ahrefs (mine was only a summary). When the metric change happened a while back, I had assumed this was simply a label change because the FAQ was not changed, but now they don’t mention it being a percent (relative to other indexed pages).

      On testing the top sites now (facebook.com, google.com, etc…) I believe it can’t be working anything like a percentile. Google, for example, has a global rank of 8 (8th most linked site), but domain rating of 92.

      Now it’s not clear to me how the scale works as a whole except that the #1 site (facebook.com) seems to be set at a domain rating of 100 and determines the 100 rating, so that everything else is in some sense relative to that. I’m amending my descriptions for URL and Domain rating.

  • Karsten Madsen

    Thanks for this post Daniel. Would you happen to know how Global Rank is measured?

    I know it shows your ranking on the web compared to all other websites, but would be nice to have more detailed explanation.

    THis is the one ranking my customers understand the easiest.

    • The ahrefs Global Rank is a ranking of link profiles relative to all other sites on the internet. So Facebook.com is #1, then twitter, youtube, wordpress.org, etc… This means facebook has the strongest link profile in the world (most and strongest links), then twitter, youtube, and so on…

  • Clement Lim

    Good job Daniel. I don’t know why Ahrefs doesn’t publish this information either.

    Excellent explanations.