Internal Link Checker
Analyze any webpage's internal linking structure. Find all internal links, hash links, unique pages, and nofollow attributes.
Internal Link Checker Features
Comprehensive internal linking analysis for any webpage.
Internal Link Discovery
Finds every internal link on a page, including navigation, content links, and footer links pointing to the same domain.
Unique Page Count
Counts the number of unique internal pages linked from the page, helping you understand your site's link distribution.
Hash Link Detection
Identifies anchor/hash links (#) that point to sections within the same page, separate from page-level links.
Anchor Text Analysis
Extracts the visible anchor text of each internal link to help optimize your internal linking strategy and keyword usage.
How It Works
Analyze internal links in three simple steps.
Enter a URL
Paste or type any webpage URL. We fetch the full HTML and parse every anchor tag on the page.
Links Are Classified
Each link is classified as internal or external. Internal links are further categorized as page links, hash links, or nofollow links.
Review Your Results
See a summary of internal link counts, unique pages, and hash links. Filter by type and browse the full link table.
Related Tools
More tools to analyze and debug websites.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about internal link analysis.
What is an internal link?
An internal link is a hyperlink that points to another page on the same website (same domain). Internal links help users navigate your site and help search engines discover and understand your site's structure and hierarchy.
Why is internal linking important for SEO?
Internal links distribute page authority (link equity) across your site, help search engines crawl and index your pages, establish site hierarchy, and improve user navigation. Pages with more internal links pointing to them tend to rank better.
What are hash links?
Hash links (also called anchor links or jump links) use the # symbol to link to a specific section within the same page. For example, /page#section-2 scrolls to the element with id="section-2". They are useful for long-form content but don't pass link equity to other pages.
Should internal links have nofollow?
Generally, no. Internal links should be dofollow so that link equity flows naturally through your site. Using nofollow on internal links wastes crawl budget and prevents PageRank from flowing to those pages. The only exception might be links to login pages or other pages you don't want indexed.