High-Speed Link Extraction & Analysis Tool
Perform comprehensive link audits by extracting all URLs from live webpages or raw HTML. Instantly categorize links as internal, external, or nofollow to evaluate link equity and site architecture.
Perform comprehensive link audits by extracting all URLs from live webpages or raw HTML. Instantly categorize links as internal, external, or nofollow to evaluate link equity and site architecture.
Choose live URL mode or pasted HTML/text mode, then extract every detectable link.
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Analyzing links is a critical task for identifying architectural crawl issues, orphan pages, and link value distribution. Our URL Extractor scrapes any live URL or pasted HTML to list all internal, external, and nofollow links instantly.
Internal links connect the pages of your domain, distributing link equity (ranking power) across your site. Search crawlers rely on these links to discover new subpages. A poorly linked site leaves orphan pages that cannot be indexed. Auditing internal links ensures crawl accessibility.
Outbound links reference external domains. Linking to authoritative, relevant sources improves content trust and signals editorial depth. However, excessive low-quality outbound links can leak authority and hurt user retention. Audit outbound URLs to ensure reference quality.
The HTML rel attribute specifies the relationship between your page and the destination URL. A "nofollow" value tells search engine spiders not to pass authority. Use "nofollow", "sponsored", or "ugc" attributes for paid links, ads, and user-generated comments to prevent penalties.
A URL Extractor parses HTML code to extract and categorize all destination links, allowing webmasters to quickly audit site links and clean up broken URLs.
An internal link points to a page on the same domain. An external link points to a completely different domain or third-party website.
Use nofollow (rel="nofollow") when linking to unverified user content, paid sponsorships, advertisements, or any site where you do not want to endorse their authority.
There is no strict limit, but Google recommends keeping the number of links on a page to a reasonable number (typically under 100-200 links) to avoid diluting link equity.