Recently, I had a friend ask me for help because her website rankings were tanking.
Always willing to lend a helping hand, I asked her what she had been doing to build links and improve SEO.
Everything she was doing checked out OK. So, I fired up Ahrefs and took a look at her backlink profile. Thatโs when I saw it.
Tons of spammy links were pointing to her site. These links were killing her rankings.
Then I took a look at her Google Webmaster Tools account and saw that she had a manual actions report stating that her website had been penalized for low-quality links.
Hereโs an example from linkresearchtools.comย that shows what that report looks like.
I asked her if she tried using the disavow tool to remove these spammy links. She looked at me like a deer in headlights.
Hereโs the deal:
Itโs no secret that spammy links can penalize your siteโs rankings.
Knowing how to build links is a cornerstone of SEO. But the flip side is knowing how to avoid having harmful links point to your site.
If you donโt know how to protect yourself from bad backlinks, you could be setting your site up for epic failure.
The good news is that you can audit your link profile and use Googleโs disavow tool to prevent or reverse any penalties.
If you use it the wrong way, you can do more harm to your site than good. Youโll want to make sure youโre careful when using the tool.
This article will teach you how to use the tool well.
What is Googleโs Disavow Tool and When Should You Use It?
Before we go into using the tool, letโs dive into the concept of disavowing links.
Good backlinks can raise your Domain Authority (DA) and Page Authority (PA) scores, increase your visibility in search engines, and help you rank better.
Bad backlinks do just the opposite. They harm your SEO and cause you to lose ranking.
With that said, you shouldnโt go disavowing links left and right.
When you disavow a link, youโre telling the search engines not to factor in a specific link when crawling your site.
There are a few categories of bad backlinks you might consider disavowing:
- Sites set up just for links
- Obviously spam sites
- Links in spam comments
- Backlinks from sites in your non-target country/countries (e.g., a backlink from a German site when your audience is in the U.S.)
If you donโt have control over the spammy links, use the disavow tool so Google disregards them.
Googleโs Disavow Tool Warning
According to Google, using this tool the wrong way can have a negative effect on your rankings.
That sounds pretty intense, but donโt worry; Google just wants to make sure youโre not disavowing the wrong links. You should request removals first, and Iโll talk about that later.
Just make sure you use the tool when you have a lot of low-quality backlinks pointing to your siteย and when youโre sure theyโre causing problems.
The good news is that if you use it the right way, you can improve your rankings.
Disavow Tool Best Practices
There are a few important rules of thumb you should follow when using the disavow tool.:
Try Removing Links Via Email First
Google prefers that you try removing links on your ownย before using the disavow tool.
You can do this with a link removal request.
A link removal request occurs when one site owner emails another to request the removal of a link.
Moz shows an exampleย of a link removal request here.
Unfortunately, link-removal requests get a bad rap. Oftentimes theyโre ignored, missed, malicious, and even spammy. Thereโs an art to sending successful link-removal requests.
Use It When You Need It
Matt Cutts (former head of Googleโs Webspam team) gives the green light on using the disavow tool:
You may be worried about negative SEO or a bunch of spammy links pointing toward your site. In this case, it would be a good move to disavow. Itโs OK to disavow links even if you donโt see a message in your webmaster console.
If your removal-request emails arenโt effective, feel free to use the disavow tool whenever you need.
Use It Like a Shotgun, Not a Rifle
Instead of picking out bad links one by one, you should instead use the domain operator to disavow all bad backlinksย from a whole domain instead. This is also a faster method for improving rankings. It may take longer to see results if you handpick bad links one by one.
How to Use the Disavow Tool: A Step-by-Step Guide
Now itโs time to dive deep into how you can use the disavow tool โ step by step
Create a List of Backlinks
There are lots of different toolsย that you can use to get a list of your backlinks.
These services often try to automate the auditing process. While it does save time, you wonโt get as clean of a result as would if you manually reviewed each link.
To create your own backlink list manually, hereโs what you do.
Download Your Links From All Sources
First, go to Google Webmaster tools. Click search traffic, and links to your site. Download both the latest links and sample links.
If your site has a large number of domains linking to it (over 1,000), you can find more links by downloading the sample link list every day for a few days.
You can also download links from other sources:
- Open Site Explorer:ย A great tool from Moz, one of the largest brands within the advanced SEO community.
- Ahrefs:ย One of the most accurate and largest databases of live backlinks
- Majestic SEO: Breaks down a lot of information into digestible, granular pieces. This tool is great at preventing overwhelm.
- Ubersuggest: View your backlink profile, see content suggestions, and more.
Put Your Links into One Spreadsheet
Once you have gathered the spreadsheets from your sources, find the URL column of the sites that link to you and copy this column into a new spreadsheet. Feel free to use Google Docs or Excel โ whichever you prefer.
Now youโll have a master list of every link that leads to your site. You will see some duplicates, but donโt worry because weโll fix that later.
Break the URLs into Subdomains
Make a new column that is to the immediate left of your URLs. At the top of the spreadsheet (A1), type this formula:
=left(B1,find(โ/โ,B1,9-1)
Now, highlight the entire column and hit CTRL+D on your keyboard. This will fill in each cell in the row with the formula.
Once thatโs done, highlight the whole column again and convert the results of the formula into values. This will allow you to copy and paste data into the column.
Do this by hitting CTRL+C to copy, then press Edit, Paste Special, and Paste Values Only.
Next, letโs use the Find & Replace tool to break everything down to its subdomain.
With column A highlighted, click edit, then find and replace. Type โHTTP://โ (without quotes), donโt put anything in the replace field, and hit โReplace All.โ
Repeat the same steps with these two phrases
- https://
- www. (Remember the period after www)
After youโre done, column A will now have the subdomains or domains of each URL that points back to your site.
Get Rid of Duplicate Links
Youโll likely have some domains with several links. What we want is to only have one link from each domain. Sort column A into alphabetic order and then insert a new column to the left of the domains. Put in this formula:
=if(B1=B2,โduplicateโ,โuniqueโ)
Copy this down the entire spreadsheet again (you can also click the little plus sign in the lower right-hand corner of a highlighted cell โ also known as the โfillโ button).
Next, filter this column to only show the duplicates. Finally, delete each duplicate URL.
Now youโll have one URL for each domain thatโs giving you a backlink.
Audit Your Backlinks
Now, click on each URL on your spreadsheet and decide if you want to keep all the links from each domain or disavow them.
If youโre unsure, you can always mark links as โmaybeโ and come back to them later after youโve looked at all your links.
Sometimes, you can pick up patterns after looking at all of your links that you wouldnโt have seen otherwise.
If youโre not sure whether or not you should disavow a link, think through these questions:
โDoes this link help me?โ i.e., โCould I actually get business and/or traffic from this link?โ
โWas this link made 100% for SEO only?โ
โIf a Google employee saw this link, would I be worried?โ
Remember that Google only penalizes sites that are trying to game the system. Every site has its share of unnatural links.
Youโre not going to get hit with a penalty if youโre playing by the rules. So if you see some unnatural links, donโt sweat it.
Make a Disavow File
Once youโre done reviewing each link, filter the columnย so you only see the links that you want to disavow.
Next, make a new spreadsheet and copy and paste your domains into the new sheet.
Next, you want to add โdomain:โ (no quotation marks) in front of every domain name.
When you disavow on the domain level, youโre doing a clean sweep of all the bad links on that domain. When you disavow by URL, youโre more likely to miss bad links.
Youโll want to always disavow at the domain level.
Type the following formula into B1 to add โdomain:โ to the front of every domain name.
=โdomain:โ&A1
Use the fill button to paste the formula down the entire column. Once again, highlight the column and then select paste special, paste as values.
Now, column B will be full of disavow directives.
Make a Text File
Your disavow file must be in 7-bit ASCII or UTF-8 format. You can do this a couple different ways.
On a Mac, open TextEdit, copy and paste column B into TextEdit, and then hit Format and make plain text.
On Google Docs, open a Google Doc, copy column B into a document and then click File, Download As, and Plain text.
Add Comments
Feel free to add comments to your disavow file by starting your comment with a #. But remember, Google employees donโt look at your disavow file.
The disavow tool is 100% automated. Any comment you add is for your own records. You can insert them to jog your memoryย on certain things when revisiting the file in the future.
File Your Disavow
Go to the disavow tool and pick your file from the dropdown list. Click disavow links twice and then select โchoose fileโ. Then youโll want to upload the .txt file you made.
Hereโs what a successful disavowย looks like:
Top Disavow Tool Mistakes
You may run into errors when you attempt to disavow links.
Luckily, itโs very common for an error to pop up when disavowing links. In this video, Matt Cutts talks about common mistakes that people run into when using the disavow tool.
- You should only upload a regular text file. No sorting, fonts, or syntax should be added to this file. People try to upload spreadsheets, Word docs, and other file formats.ย Only upload a text (TXT) file.
- Start out by using the domain: command when disavowing links so that you disavow all links from the entire site. Many times, users will try to disavow specific URLs with a fine-tooth comb. Donโt do this.
- Incorrect syntax is another issue that pops up a lot. Make sure you use a TXT file with the proper syntax.
- If you want to provide commentary on why Google should disavow certain links,ย save that for the reconsideration request. Donโt write it in the text file.
- When you comment using the disavow tool, make sure that you use tags. If you donโt, it will cause syntax errors. In fact, itโs best to limit your commenting.
- The disavow tool is not a magic wand that will fix every URL. You should clean up your link profile manually in addition to using the tool.
Frequently-Asked Questions
Still got questions? Hereโs a few of the most-asked questions
How Often Should I Use the Disavow Tool?
This all depends on your link profile. For example, if your site has a track record of unnatural links, you may need to do a monthly disavow.
In other cases, itโs best to do a link audit first and then a disavow.
By spacing out every disavow, you give yourself time to spot recurring problems and trends. This will help you make better decisions with your link-building strategies.
But if you have an average website that doesnโt have a history of low-quality links, and if you arenโt in a super competitive space where negative SEO isnโt much of a factor, youโre good with disavowing only once or twice per year.
When Should I Remove a Link Manually and When Should I Use the Disavow Tool?
Removing a link manually should always be your first option.
But, if youโre hit with an algorithm penalty, say from Penguin, thereโs no need to go on a long, drawn-out process of emailing site owners to ask them to get rid of links.
In that case, you should disavow. But, if youโve been hit with a manual penalty, you should definitely try to manually remove links first.
Can I Reavow a Link if I Make a Mistake?
To reavow, modify your disavow file by removing the directive and re-upload it. Matt Cutts has stated that it takes โa lot longerโ to reavow a linkย than to disavow it.
Google purposely builds in this lag time to discourage spammers from trying to game the system.
How Long Will It Take to See Better Traffic and Rankings?
Google applies your disavow directives to your links as soon as it crawls your site.
After youโve uploaded your directives, Google applies an invisible nofollow tag to the disavowed links that point to your site.
This means that those links will be thrown out of the equation when the Google algorithm considers your website.
Youโll need to wait until Google needs to run the algorithm again, so you wonโt see changes right away. Most links only take a month to be removed.
Quick Guide to Using the Disavow Tool
The Disavow tool is a powerful tool to clean up your link profile. Hereโs how to use it.
- Download All Links From All Sources
Head to Google Analytics, Ubersuggest, and Ahrefs to view all your links.
- Sort The Data
Pull all the lists together, then remove duplicates and sort.
- Audit Your Backlinks
Check to see which links are problematic, remove the ones that are okay.
- Attempt Manual Removal
Send emails to sites asking them to remove the links.
- Create a Text File
Your disavow file must be in 7-bit ASCII or UTF-8 format. You can do this a couple different ways.
- Add Comments
Use # to add comments or notes as needed.
- Submit the File to Google
Send your file over and wait for Googleโs decision.
Conclusion
Whether itโs from hiring a shady SEO agency or being the victim of negative SEO, youโll need to disavow bad links before you get penalized.
However, be careful and donโt abuse the tool. Disavowing the wrong links can hurt your rankings the same way bad backlinks can.
If you carelessly disavow links, your backlink profile may look unnatural and can cause you to get penalized.
You must review individual backlinks before you submit your disavow file. Thereโs no getting around it.
When you get things right, though, and your traffic and SEO will improve.
The disavow tool is not the end-all-be-all magic button that will send tons of traffic your way.
However, it is a great SEO tool to have in your arsenal and one that every site owner should be familiar with.
What results have you experienced from using the disavow tool?