Directory Links: Which Ones Are Worth Building and Which to Avoid

Directory links are backlinks from online directories that list websites, businesses, or resources by category, industry, or geography.

They were among the earliest and most popular link building tactics on the early web, and the sheer volume of manipulation that occurred through low-quality directory submissions is a large part of why Google developed its link quality signals in the first place.

Today, directory links occupy a specific and limited role in a well-constructed link profile:

  • high-quality
  • editorially curated directories in relevant niches can provide genuine link equity and topical relevance signals
  • while generic bulk-submission directories provide negligible value and
  • in volume
  • can be a negative signal

Understanding the difference between a directory worth submitting to and one worth avoiding is not particularly complex once you know what to look for.

The distinction comes down to editorial standards, topical relevance, genuine organic traffic, and domain authority.

Apply these four criteria consistently and you can quickly sort any directory into worth pursuing or not worth the effort.

Key Point: Directory links from high-quality, topically relevant sources with genuine editorial standards add legitimate diversity and relevance signals to your backlink profile. Directory links from generic, free-for-all submission sites add almost nothing and, in sufficient volume, can signal manipulative link building patterns. The total time invested in directory link building should reflect this: a small number of high-value directories are worth pursuing carefully; mass directory submission campaigns are not.

What Makes a Directory Worth Submitting To

A high-quality directory has several identifiable characteristics. It has editorial review: submissions are assessed before listing, not automatically accepted.

It has genuine organic traffic from real search audiences, visible in Ahrefs or Semrush.

It has a Domain Rating of at least 40, ideally higher for major niche directories.

It has topical relevance to your industry or a geographic relevance to your location.

And the listing itself includes a followed link to your website, not just a citation without a hyperlink.

The contrast with a low-quality directory is stark. Automatic approval with no review, zero organic traffic, DR below 20, listing any website from any industry, and often offering followed links specifically marketed as SEO value rather than as a reader service: these are the characteristics of the directories that have no value and carry escalating risk if used in volume.

High-Value Directory Types

Legal directories: Chambers and Partners, The Legal 500, Martindale-Hubbell, Justia, and Avvo all carry significant authority for law firm SEO specifically because they are trusted reference sources for people seeking legal services.

They have genuine traffic and editorial standards.

Software and SaaS review platforms: G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, GetApp, and Software Advice provide followed links from domains with strong authority specifically in the software buyer audience.

For B2B SaaS companies, maintaining complete, accurate profiles on these platforms is a standard part of both SEO and lead generation.

Industry trade associations: Member directories on trade association websites provide followed links from topically authoritative domains. If your industry has active trade bodies with member directories, listing is almost always worth the effort.

Local business directories: For businesses with local SEO objectives, Google Business Profile, Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps, Yell, and industry-specific local directories provide both citation signals and occasional followed links that contribute to local pack rankings.

Consistency of NAP data (Name, Address, Phone) across these listings matters as much as the links themselves for local SEO.

Niche resource directories: Many industry verticals have established resource directories curated by practitioners.

A cybersecurity tools directory curated by a security researcher, a marketing resources list maintained by an industry publication, or a legal services directory run by a bar association all carry topical authority that goes beyond their raw DR score.

Directories to Avoid

Generic web directories with no topical focus and automatic submission acceptance have been largely devalued by Google and provide no meaningful SEO benefit.

These include the long tail of directories that emerged specifically to capitalise on early PageRank manipulation opportunities and have never evolved into genuine reference sources.

Paid directory links sold specifically as SEO tools, particularly in bulk packages, are a clear link scheme signal.

A directory whose primary marketing pitch is the SEO value of its listings rather than the audience it serves is almost certainly providing links that Google either ignores or penalises.

The SEO marketplace is full of packages offering “500 directory submissions” or similar bulk services: these are not worth purchasing and the links they produce range from valueless to actively harmful in large volumes.

How to Assess a Specific Directory

Before submitting to any directory, run a five-point check. Open Ahrefs: is the DR above 40?

Does it have genuine organic traffic? Open the site itself: does it require manual review before listing?

Does it cover your specific niche or geography, or does it accept any website? Search for competitors in the directory: are legitimate businesses in your industry already listed?

If the answers to these five questions are positive, the directory is worth pursuing.

If more than one is negative, move on.

This check takes three to four minutes per directory. Given that a high-quality directory link has lasting value and a low-quality one may require disavowal in the future, the time investment in this evaluation is well justified.

Build a shortlist of 10 to 20 high-quality directories relevant to your industry and geography, submit to them carefully with accurate and consistent NAP data, and leave mass directory building to competitors who have not yet understood why it no longer works.

Directory Links in the Context of a Full Link Building Strategy

Directory links, even from the best sources, should be a minor component of a complete link building strategy rather than its centrepiece.

The authority benefit of directory links is real but limited compared to editorial links from topically relevant publications, niche edits within high-traffic articles, or editorial guest posts on genuine industry publications.

Think of quality directory links as foundational diversity additions to a profile primarily built on editorial acquisition rather than as a primary authority driver.

For local businesses where directory presence is part of a local SEO strategy, directory links play a proportionally larger role because citation consistency and local directory authority are genuine local ranking factors.

For non-local businesses competing on informational or commercial keywords, directory links are a small supporting element of a broader programme built around editorial link acquisition through link building services that target the higher-authority placements that actually move the competitive needle.

Important: Mass directory submission campaigns, particularly those using automated tools to submit to hundreds of directories simultaneously, are a clear manipulative link pattern that can trigger algorithmic scrutiny. Build directory links manually, selectively, and only from sources that pass the quality criteria above. The ten best directory links in your niche are worth more than five hundred generic directory submissions.

Tracking and Maintaining Directory Listings

Once you have submitted to your shortlist of high-quality directories, maintain the listings as your business information changes.

An outdated phone number or address in a directory listing creates NAP inconsistency that undermines local SEO signals.

Set a calendar reminder to review all directory listings annually and update any details that have changed.

This maintenance step takes an hour per year but protects the ongoing SEO value of the listings and ensures referral visitors from those directories reach accurate business information.

Track the followed link status of your directory listings periodically too. Some directories change their link policies over time, switching from followed to nofollow links or adding redirect layers that reduce equity transfer.

A quick Ahrefs check of your directory listing URLs every six months confirms whether the links are still passing equity as expected.

If a previously followed directory link has become nofollow, the listing may still have value for referral traffic and citation consistency, but it no longer contributes to your link equity profile in the same way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Topical FAQ

Are directory links good for SEO?
+

Quality varies enormously. High-quality niche directories and industry association member listings with genuine organic traffic and editorial standards provide useful topical diversity and local relevance signals. Generic bulk-submission directories with no editorial standards and zero organic traffic provide no value and carry manipulation pattern risk at volume. The distinction is between genuine editorial directories and link farm directories.

What types of directories are worth submitting to?
+

Industry-specific association directories, chamber of commerce listings, legitimate local business directories (Google Business Profile, Bing Places), professional membership organisations, niche-specific resource directories with editorial curation, and established general directories with real organic traffic and editorial standards. These have DR, genuine organic visitors, and are consulted by real people — characteristics that make them genuine referring domain additions.

What directory links should I avoid?
+

Mass-submission generic web directories with hundreds of outbound links per page, directories that accept any site without editorial review, directories with no organic traffic, and bulk directory submission services offering hundreds of submissions for minimal cost. These are the directory patterns Google identified in the Penguin era as link scheme participants. The links add nothing and contribute to manipulation risk at volume.

How many directory links should I have?
+

A small number of genuinely high-quality relevant directory listings is useful — 5 to 15 from top-tier sources appropriate to your business type (industry association, chamber of commerce, primary niche directory). Beyond this, the marginal value of additional directory links is minimal and the risk of looking like you are pursuing a mass directory submission strategy increases. Priority should be editorial niche edits and guest posts, not directory volume.

Do local directories help local SEO specifically?
+

Yes. Citations in genuine local business directories (Google Business Profile, Yelp, Bing Places, local chamber of commerce) contribute to the local citation signals that reinforce geographic relevance for local search queries. For local businesses targeting location-based searches, a complete presence in major local directories is a valuable local SEO foundation, distinct from the general SEO value of editorial backlinks.

LinkPanda Service FAQ

Does LinkPanda build directory links?
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LinkPanda focuses on editorial niche edits and guest posts — the link types that produce the strongest competitive authority per placement. Directory links at small volumes from genuine directories are not harmful but are not the focus of LinkPanda acquisition because they produce limited per-link equity compared to in-content editorial placements on genuine publications with real organic traffic.

Should I build directory links alongside a LinkPanda programme?
+

A small number of genuinely relevant, high-quality directory listings (industry association, chamber of commerce, primary niche directory) is a useful supplement to an editorial link programme. These can typically be acquired once through your own research without ongoing management. The majority of your link building budget and effort is better directed at editorial acquisition through LinkPanda.

How do directory links compare to LinkPanda niche edits in SEO value?
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A quality niche edit on a DR 55 industry publication with 5,000 monthly organic visitors passes substantially more page-level PageRank than a directory listing on the same domain. Editorial in-content placements on genuine publications consistently outperform directory listings at comparable domain authority because they have higher linking page URL Rating, fewer outgoing links, and stronger editorial independence signals.

Sources

External Sources

1

Moz Local Citations — Moz

Moz’s directory and citation guide — the taxonomy of directory link quality from high-value niche directories with genuine organic traffic to bulk-submission directories with no audience or editorial standards.

2

Ahrefs Local SEO: The Complete Guide

Ahrefs’ local SEO guide covering industry association member pages and niche directories as useful topical diversity signals — genuine organic traffic and editorial standards distinguish valuable from worthless submissions.

3

Ahrefs Are Directory Links Still Worth It for SEO?

Ahrefs’ directory link analysis confirming that a small number of genuinely high-quality relevant directory listings is a useful addition to any profile, while mass directory submission campaigns provide no value and carry manipulation pattern risk.

4

Google Search Central Google Spam Policies — Directory Schemes

Google’s spam policies covering bulk directory submission as a link scheme pattern — free submission directories with no editorial standards and zero organic traffic represent exactly the type of manufactured links guidelines prohibit.

5

Ahrefs Business Directories — Local Authority Signals

Ahrefs’ local directory guidance — how Yell, FreeIndex, and industry-specific member directories with genuine organic traffic provide useful topical and local authority signals for local businesses.

Internal References

6

LinkPanda Types of Backlinks: Which Ones Help SEO and Which to Avoid

Where directory links sit in the backlink taxonomy — how quality varies enormously by directory type and why the selection criteria matter more than the directory format itself.

7

LinkPanda Link Building for Real Estate: Rank Locally and Nationally

How property portals and local directories function as the citation foundation for local authority — the baseline that editorial links build upon for local competitive rankings.

8

LinkPanda Link Building for Lawyers: Earn Authority in a Competitive Niche

How legal directories including Chambers, The Legal 500, and Justia provide followed links from authoritative domain profiles — the high-quality end of the directory link spectrum.

Build the Editorial Links That Move Rankings

Directory links add useful diversity but editorial links drive competitive rankings. LinkPanda builds in-content editorial placements on high-authority publications that deliver the authority impact directories alone never can.

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About The Author

Danish Khan

Danish is a Content Writer who specializes in translating complex SaaS and B2B concepts into clear, compelling copy that drives growth. With a foundational expertise in data analytics and programming, he doesn't just write about technical topics - he understands them. This allows him to craft content that is not only engaging but also deeply accurate and insightful. Danish is passionate about creating narratives that don't just inform - they convert, helping brands build authority, connect with their ideal customers, and achieve measurable results.