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Highlights:
One day while drinking coffee, I started thinking about whether do nofollow links help seo because many SEO professionals seem confused about it.
Back in June 2020, I personally realized that nofollow backlinks actually help SEO a lot. They are not as powerful as dofollow backlinks, but they work slowly over time.
I was looking at a client’s analytics. They had landed a massive feature in a major publication.
The link was nofollow.
The SEO team was frustrated, but over the next few weeks, I watched the organic traffic lift. Rankings for secondary keywords started creeping up.
That was the moment I stopped looking at link building purely as a binary “dofollow equals good, nofollow equals useless” game.
So, let’s look at what is actually going on behind the scenes with these links.
To understand where we are, you have to look at where we started. Back in 2005, the internet was drowning in comment spam. People were writing automated bots to drop thousands of links on blog posts just to manipulate Google crawling and artificially boost their rankings.
Google, Yahoo, and Bing teamed up to introduce the rel=”nofollow” attribute. The idea was simple. If a link had this tag, search engines would completely ignore it. It wouldn’t pass PageRank. It wouldn’t impact rankings.
It was an easy fix for blog comments, forum signatures, and Wikipedia citations. It told search engines, “Hey, I don’t necessarily endorse this site, so don’t pass my authority to them.”
But does Google completely ignore nofollow links? Not anymore. The landscape changed, and the way search engines process these links shifted dramatically.
For years, SEOs used the nofollow tag to try and outsmart Google. People used a tactic called PageRank sculpting. They would nofollow their internal “Contact Us” or “Privacy Policy” pages, thinking it would funnel more authority to their main money pages.
Google caught onto this and changed the math in 2009. Nofollowed links still consumed a portion of a page’s PageRank, it just evaporated instead of passing through to the target page.
Then came September 2019. Google dropped a massive update. They announced that rel=”nofollow” would no longer be a strict directive. Instead, it became a “hint.” Search engines could now choose to look at a nofollow link and decide if they wanted to use it for ranking signals or indexing.
They also introduced two new link attributes:
The strict answer is that nofollow links are not designed to pass PageRank. A dofollow link is a direct vote of confidence. A nofollow link is more like a neutral nod.
However, since the 2019 update, Google treats it as a hint. If you get a nofollow link from an extremely authoritative site like Forbes or The New York Times, Google’s algorithms might look at that link, understand the context, and decide to give you some credit for it anyway.
Here is a quick look at the differences:
| Feature | Dofollow Links | Nofollow Links |
| Passes PageRank | Yes | No (but acts as a hint) |
| HTML Attribute | None (default) | rel=”nofollow” |
| Primary Use | Endorsed content, natural citations | Paid links, comments, untrusted sites |
| Crawl Priority | High | Low |
| Direct Ranking Signal | Strong | Weak / Contextual |
So why do many SEO experts still build them? Because SEO is not just about raw PageRank. It is about building a recognizable brand entity. When nofollow backlinks help SEO indirectly, they usually do so through the following ways.
Have you ever noticed referral traffic from nofollow backlinks? A link on a massive industry forum might be nofollow, but if it gets clicked by 500 targeted buyers, that is highly valuable. That traffic interacts with your site. They might buy a product, sign up for a newsletter, or bookmark your page.
If 100% of your links are dofollow, you look guilty of manipulation. A natural backlink profile includes a messy mix of followed links, nofollowed links, image links, and brand mentions. If you want to survive Google’s spam updates, you need link diversity.
When you buy ads, sponsor events, or do affiliate marketing, using the nofollow or sponsored tags keeps you safe from manual penalties. Google wants to see that you are playing by the rules with paid placements.
Search engines are smart enough to read the text around your link. Even if the link is nofollowed, Google sees your brand name sitting next to highly relevant industry keywords on an authoritative site. These brand signals help build your entity’s authority over time.
Google wants clarity.
They introduced rel=”sponsored” and rel=”ugc” to understand the web better.
If you are paying for a link, use sponsored. If a user leaves a link in your blog comments, use ugc. If you are linking out to a site but just don’t want to pass authority, stick with the classic nofollow.
John Mueller from Google has mentioned multiple times that people stress too much about the exact ratio of these links. His advice is usually quite simple: use the tags appropriately when money changes hands or when you can’t verify the destination, and let the algorithms figure out the rest.
There have been plenty of studies on this topic. Ahrefs ran a massive study analyzing thousands of SERPs and found a weak but existing correlation between the number of nofollow links a page has and its ranking. Tim Soulo noted that this could indicate Google values some strong nofollow links.
I remember an experiment by an SEO named Adam White a few years ago. He bought a series of strictly nofollow links on high-authority sites for a target keyword. Over time, that page actually climbed the rankings. Was it the direct hint value of the links, or the behavioral signals of the traffic they brought? It was likely a mix of both.
When I first started in SEO, I made plenty of mistakes regarding nofollow links. Here are a few that stand out.
If you want to integrate this into your daily workflow, here is how I handle it:
The biggest misconception is that nofollow links actively hurt your site. They don’t. They are a normal part of the internet ecosystem.
Another misconception is that Wikipedia links are the holy grail. They are great for trust, but they are strictly nofollow. A Wikipedia link won’t skyrocket your rankings overnight, but it validates your entity as a credible source.
It is extremely rare. While nofollow links provide hints and traffic, you still need a baseline of dofollow links to build measurable domain authority.
If it was an earned editorial mention and their site policy doesn’t restrict it, you can politely ask. But if they say no, don’t stress. It still holds value as a brand mention.
You can right-click any link, select “Inspect,” and look at the HTML code. If you see rel=”nofollow”, it is a nofollow link. You can also use various free browser extensions that highlight them automatically.
You can’t control every link that points to your site. Obsessing over whether every single placement passes PageRank is a fast track to burnout.
Focus on building relationships, publishing data that people want to reference, and getting your brand in front of the right eyes. When you do that, your natural backlink profile will grow. You will get followed links, you will get nofollowed links, and most importantly, you will get results.