HomeBlogLink Building Tips & TricksAhrefs Domain Rating: How Important Is It For Link Building?

Ahrefs Domain Rating: How Important Is It For Link Building?

We love clean numbers because they make messy decisions feel simple.

Ahrefs’ Domain Rating (DR) is one of those numbers. Helpful? Definitely. Definitive? Not quite. Let’s find out why.

What is Ahrefs Domain Rating?

DR is Ahrefs’ 0–100 score that estimates the strength of a website’s backlink profile compared to others. It’s logarithmic, so climbing from DR 20→30 is easier than 70→80. It’s based on the link graph – how many unique domains link to you, how strong those domains are, and how link juice flows across the web. Similar ideas exist elsewhere (Moz’s DA, Majestic’s TF/CF, Semrush’s Authority Score), but the recipes differ.

Does DR affect rankings?

No – DR isn’t a Google signal. But sites with trustworthy link profiles (which DR approximates) often perform better. That’s correlation, not causation. Use DR to spot likely strength, then confirm with real indicators: the target page’s visibility, topical fit, and whether the site actually gets search traffic.

How is DR calculated? The short version

Ahrefs models the web’s link graph. It evaluates:
  • Referring domains (unique sites linking to you)
  • The authority of those referrers (and their own backlinks)
  • How link equity passes through redirect chains and across subdomains
  • The overall shape of your link profile

As Ahrefs’ index updates, DR scores can shift even if you didn’t change anything – that’s normal.

What actually influences DR

  • Editorial links from credible, relevant sites: especially pages that rank and get organic visits
  • Diversity of referring domains: many distinct, trustworthy sources – not five hundred links from the same network
  • Natural growth pattern: steady growth beats sudden bursts from one source
  • Link context and placement: in-content links on indexed pages > sitewide, footer, or orphaned placements
  • Internal links that surface important pages: authority flows more efficiently when your structure isn’t a maze

What hardly moves DR (or distorts it)

  • Nofollow/sponsored links: fine for brand and referral traffic, limited authority impact
  • Irrelevant mentions: off-topic sites rarely help
  • Raw volume from weak sites: lots of thin inserts won’t move the needle – and can backfire

Limitations you should respect

  • DR is domain-wide. The URL competing in the SERP often determines the winner.
  • It’s a third-party estimate. Different tools disagree – sometimes wildly.
  • Just like Moz DA, Ahrefs DR is relative – industry context is key. A DR 40 fintech site isn’t the same as a DR 40 hobby blog.
  • It’s delayed. Link wins today may reflect in the score weeks later.
  • Beware: DR can be gamed. Paid networks, sitewide rentals, and link farms can boost DR without adding real value.

Where to check DR (and what to sanity‑check)

  • Ahrefs Site Explorer or the free Ahrefs SEO Toolbar
  • Cross-check with Moz (DA), Majestic (TF/CF), and Semrush’s Authority Score
  • Validate with traffic and rankings using Ahrefs/Semrush/Similarweb
  • Peek at the site’s top pages: are they ranking, earning links, getting crawled?

Does DR matter for link building?

Yes – conditionally. DR helps you shortlist prospects and avoid obvious dead ends. Still, don’t buy links based on DR alone.

As we’ve warned before in Link Building Mistakes That Might Be Affecting Your Rankings (must-read): metrics can be gamed, so make sure you vet the site.

Your Site Vetting Checklist

  • Check organic traffic, not just DR
  • Inspect referring domains for spam patterns
  • Scan content quality – thin, AI-slop, or pay-to-play hubs are red flags
  • Avoid sites that sell every niche under the sun (Finance + CBD + Gambling? Hard pass.)

How to improve DR (without chasing the number)

  • Publish link-worthy assets: unique data, sharp explainers, calculators, visual summaries
  • Earn editorial mentions: digital PR, expert commentary, partnerships, community-led resources
  • Target meaningful placements: editorial mentions on pages that rank and get crawled
  • Strengthen internal links: surface your best work, cluster by topic, fix orphaned pages
  • Clean up junk: disavow only when necessary, but do audit spammy injections and dead redirect chains
  • Be consistent: sustainable outreach > one-off campaigns

Domain Rating and your link building strategy

Here’s the simple workflow:
  1. Start with DR to sort the list; don’t end there.
  2. Check topic fit first, DR second.
  3. Evaluate the target page: does it rank, get impressions, and make sense for your audience?
  4. Favor editorial, context-rich placements over cheap sitewide links.
  5. Track leading indicators that matter: new referring domains → crawl frequency → impressions → non-brand clicks.
  6. Backlinks matter – for visibility, for discovery, and yes, often for DR. But the links that drive outcomes usually read like recommendations, not transactions.

Bottom line

DR is indeed a handy shortcut. Use it to compare and prioritize, after that, trust the signals that matter – search intent, topical fit, traffic, and outcomes.