All core tools

All free SEO tool pages in one focused hub

This page clusters the main tools by real-world SEO jobs: authority analysis, rank tracking, backlink analysis, keyword discovery, and on-page optimization. It is a useful internal hub for users and a clear supporting page for the site architecture.

Why a tool hub matters

A strong hub page improves internal linking, groups related intents, and gives search engines a clearer map of the toolkit. It also makes the landing page feel more editorial and complete.

  • Links to every primary tool from one crawl-friendly page
  • Original copy that explains when each tool should be used
  • A supporting page that can attract broader search terms like all SEO tools

Tool directory

Choose the report you need

Each tool page uses a cleaner interface than many public competitors and adds supporting educational sections below the fold to increase usefulness.

Authority analysis

Domain Authority Checker

Check domain authority, page authority, referring domains, and overall link strength in a clean report view.

Rank tracking

Keyword Position Checker

Review keyword positions by device and location so you can track real ranking movement instead of guessing.

Link analysis

Backlink Checker

Inspect backlinks, anchor text, follow ratios, and competitor link opportunities without a crowded layout.

Content planning

Keyword Research Tool

Generate keyword ideas, questions, clusters, and content angles that support practical SEO planning.

Page optimization

On-Page SEO Checker

Audit titles, headings, copy, internal links, and technical basics for any URL in a readable report.

Decision guide

How to choose the right SEO tool first

The best starting tool depends on the question a visitor is trying to answer.

Use authority checking when you need a benchmark

If the question is how strong a site looks relative to others in the niche, authority checking is the right start. It is especially useful when evaluating outreach prospects, link opportunities, or newly discovered competitors.

Use rank checking when visibility is changing

If a page lost traffic or a keyword campaign is new, ranking data helps you see where movement happened. That makes it easier to decide whether a content update, internal linking pass, or technical review is needed.

Use backlink analysis when links are the bottleneck

A backlink report shows whether competitors are winning because they have stronger references, better anchors, or a broader set of domains linking to key pages.

Use keyword research before producing content

When the goal is to publish new pages, keyword research comes first. It helps define what people are looking for, how topics cluster together, and which pages deserve their own angle.

Use on-page analysis before a refresh or launch

When a page exists but underperforms, on-page checks help identify whether the title, heading structure, keyword mapping, internal links, or content depth needs improvement.

Use all five as a connected system

Real SEO work rarely depends on a single metric. The strongest user experience comes from treating the tools as one workflow instead of isolated pages.

Architecture

A simple structure that scales

You can expand the toolkit later with technical SEO or local SEO pages, but this five-page core is enough to launch a coherent site.

Recommended launch structure

  • Landing page targeting broad free SEO tools intent
  • Tool hub for internal navigation and category relevance
  • Five primary money pages or traffic pages for the tools themselves
  • About, contact, privacy, terms, disclaimer, and editorial policy pages
  • Sitemap and robots files after upload

Ideas for future expansion

  • Technical SEO checker or robots.txt tester
  • Meta title and description generators
  • Local pack or GBP visibility tools
  • Topic cluster guides, glossaries, and educational blog posts
  • Case studies and methodology pages once the site is live