Live utility

Internal Link Counter

Count likely internal links in content

Free tool Uses 0 Credits Live utility

Interactive tool studio

Use the live workspace below. Utility tools update in place, while AI tools return formatted output directly inside the page.

Primary input

Paste the text, HTML, links, or markup you want to process.

Analysis metrics

0 Words
0 Characters
0 Sentences
1 min Read time

Output preview

Start typing to see the live output update here.

See whether the page is connected to the rest of the site

Internal links help search engines understand page relationships and help users move deeper into your content. This counter gives you a fast way to review whether a page has enough internal connections to feel supported. That matters because strong pages often underperform simply because they are isolated and not well integrated into the broader site structure.

Useful during audits and content refreshes

When you update a page, it is easy to focus on the copy and forget the link architecture around it. This tool helps bring that layer back into view. It is useful when reviewing blog posts, service pages, and resource hubs that should be connected to related articles, category pages, and core conversion pages but are not yet doing enough in that role.

Link support strengthens ranking potential

A cleaner internal link profile can help distribute authority, clarify topical relationships, and keep users moving through the site. Counting those links is only a first step, but it makes hidden weaknesses easier to spot. Pair this tool with heading checks, content optimization, and guest posting so your best pages are supported from both inside and outside the site.

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Frequently asked questions

These answers are specific to this tool, how it fits into RankAndWrite, and how to get better output from the workflow above.

What is Internal Link Counter meant to show?

It shows whether a page appears to have enough internal linking support to feel connected to the rest of the site.

Why do internal links matter for SEO?

Internal links help distribute authority, clarify topical relationships, and guide both users and crawlers to related content.

Can a good page still underperform with weak internal links?

Yes. A strong page can stay isolated if the site does not connect it properly to other relevant sections.

When should I check internal links?

Check them during content refreshes, new page launches, and audits of pages that should be receiving more support from the rest of the site.

What should I use after counting internal links?

Content Optimizer and Guest Posts are useful next steps if the page needs both stronger internal support and stronger external authority.