Spam Score

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Which of the 27 features your site triggered isn't currently available. You'll need to look at the 27 features listed in this article and review your own site to see what you could change to improve your site's score.
  • No, it's not. Spam Score shows you the percentage of sites with similar features that have been penalized by Google.
  • Spam Score updates quarterly however this does not mean an individual website’s Spam Score will change with every update. Your Spam Score will only change if our crawlers detect changes which impact 27 signals used to assess a site.
  • No, we don't have a way to identify links you've disavowed. Google doesn't make this information available through their Search Console API.
  • No, it is not currently possible to submit a list of disavowed links to be removed from our index.
  • No, we do not currently have a way to show historical Spam Score.
  • If you need to pull Spam Score in bulk, you can do so via the Moz Links API or by creating a Link Tracking List and exporting the data to CSV. Within the CSV export, Spam Score will be noted in column D.
  • If you are seeing a Spam Score of “--” for your site or sites within your list of Linking Domains, this indicates we have not evaluated the Spam Score of that site yet. Be sure to check back as we may have a Spam Score available at a later date.

What's Covered?

In this guide you’ll learn more about the Spam Score metric in Link Explorer and the Links section of your Campaign.

Looking for information on how to investigate and improve your Spam Score? Be sure to check out our Investigating Spam Score guide.

Quick Links

What Is Spam Score?

Within Link Explorer, Spam Score represents the percentage of sites with similar features to the site you’re researching which we've found to be penalized or banned by Google. Spam Score is based on our machine learning model which identified 27 common features among the millions of banned or penalized sites in the data we fed it.

A score of 1%-30% is considered a Low Spam Score.

A score of 31%-60% is considered a Medium Spam Score.

A score of 61%-100% is considered a High Spam Score.

A high Spam Score for your site, or a site you're looking at, doesn't mean this site is necessarily spammy. It's a sign that you should do some more investigation into the quality and relevance of this site. Read more about how to use Spam Score.

You can access Spam Score through the Link Explorer tool, and through the Links section of your Moz Pro Campaign.

Location of Spam Score in the left hand navigation menu.

Spam Score Breakdown

The first thing you’ll see is the Spam Score on the right-hand side for the site you entered. You’ll also see a breakdown for the percentage of Linking Domains pointing to your site which fall into each Spam Score rating.

In the below example, 86.7% of the Linking Domains pointing to the queried site have a Low Spam Score of 1%-30%. The queried site itself, has a score of 4%.

The Spam Score of the site you're researching is noted to the right.

Below the Spam Score Breakdown you’ll see a chart with all the inbound links for the queried site, sorted by descending Spam Score. You can export to CSV, or click on the inbound link to do some investigating.

The links pointing to your site will be sorted by Spam Score.

How To Use Spam Score

Your Spam Score

This does not mean that your site is definitely spammy. The percentage represents a wide variety of potential signals ranging from content concerns to low authority metrics.

Since this is based on correlation with penalization rather than causation, the solution isn't necessarily to change these factors on your site. If you have not had any penalties you shouldn’t be concerned about a Low or Medium score. It is best to use this percentage figure to judge the quality of inbound links to your site, giving you a signal to help you determine which of those links needs some further investigation and, perhaps, even removal.

Another site's Spam Score

Again, this doesn't mean that these sites are spammy. This percentage represents a wide variety of potential signals ranging from content concerns to low authority metrics.

Since this is just based on correlation with penalization, rather than causation, the solution isn't necessarily to disregard sites or disavow links with higher Spam Scores. Instead, we'd recommend using it as a guide for kick starting investigations. Be sure to check out a site's content and its relevance in linking back to you before disregarding or disavowing.

Export Your Data

You can export your data to CSV using the button on the right. Once your report is ready, you can download it from the Export Notifications flag on the top right.

Please note: The number of rows you’re able to export from Link Explorer is dependent on your subscription level.

Spam Score Signals

We utilized machine learning and a massive set of training data, consisting of known penalized and banned domains, to identify these key signals that are correlated with sites that have been penalized or banned.

We have listed these numerically, but this number has no bearing on the importance of each signal.

Here’s a rundown of the 27 signals we use:

1. Low number of pages found Our crawlers discovered only a small number of pages on this domain. This is not an inherent problem, but many spam sites have small numbers of pages, hence the correlation.

2. TLD correlated with spam domains Certain top level domains (e.g. .download .stream .win .biz)are more commonly associated with spammy sites.

3. Domain name length The length of the subdomain and root domain is similar to those used by spam sites.

4. Domain name contains numerals Numeric characters being included in the domain name is often associated with spam sites.

5. Google Font API Present Domains which do not use special fonts (e.g. Google Font API) are often more likely to be spam sites. Lacking this special font feature was common among spam sites we found.

6. Google Tag Manager Google Tag Manager is almost never present on spam sites.

7. Doubleclick Present The Doubleclick ad tag is almost never present on spam sites.

8. Phone Number Present Spam sites rarely have real phone numbers present on their pages.

9. Links to LinkedIn Almost no spam sites have an associated LinkedIn page, hence lacking this feature is correlated with spam.

10. Email Address Present Email addresses are almost never present on spam sites.

11. Defaults to HTTPS Few spam sites invest in SSL certificates; HTTPS is often a good trust signal.

12. Use of Meta Keywords Pages that use the meta keywords tag are more likely to be spam than those that don't.

13. Visit Rank Websites with very few visits in clickstream panels were more often spam than those with high numbers of visits.

14. Rel Canonical Utilizing a non-local rel=canonical tag is often associated with spam.

15. Length of Title Element Pages with very long or very short titles are correlated with spam sites.

16. Length of Meta Description Pages with very long or very short meta description tags are correlated with spam sites.

17. Length of Meta Keywords Pages with very long meta keywords tags are often found on spam sites.

18. Browser Icon Spam sites rarely use a favicon; non-spam sites often do.

19. Facebook Pixel The Facebook tracking pixel is almost never present on spam sites.

20. Number of External Outlinks Spam sites are more likely to have abnormally high or low external outlinks.

21. Number of Domains Linked-To Spam sites are more likely to have abnormally high or low unique domains to which they link.

22. Ratio of External Links to Content Spam sites are more likely to have abnormal ratios of links to content.

23. Vowels/Consonants in Domain Name Spam sites often have many sequential vowels or consonants in their domain name.

24. Hyphens in Domain Name Spam sites are more likely to use multiple hyphens in their domain name.

25. URL Length Spam pages often have abnormally short or long URL path lengths.

26. Presence of Poison Words Spam sites often employ specific words that are associated with webspam topics like pharmaceuticals, adult content, gaming, and others.

27. Uses High CPC Anchor Text Spam sites often employ specific words in the anchor text of outlinks that are associated with webspam topics like pharmaceuticals, adult content, gaming, and others.

Understanding Link Explorer Terminology

More definitions are available in our Glossary.

Domain Authority (DA) - Domain Authority is a Moz proprietary metric from 1-100 which predicts how well a domain will rank in Google based on a machine learning algorithm of link metrics.
Page Authority (PA) - Page Authority is a Moz proprietary metric from 1-100 which predicts how well a page will rank in Google based on a machine learning algorithm of link metrics.
Date Crawled - The date on which this page was crawled for Spam Score assessment.
Inbound Links (backlinks) - An incoming link from a page on another website back to your own site.
Spam Score - Represents the percentage of sites with similar features we've found to be penalized or banned by Google. This does not mean that the site is spammy. It’s best to use this is a guide to potentially spammy sites for further investigation.
Linking Domains (Total Linking Root Domains) - Number of unique root domains linking to a target. Two links from the same website will only be counted as one linking root domain.
Links via Redirect - Inbound links pointing to a URL which redirects to the site you are tracking or researching. If page X links to page Y, and page Y has a redirect to page Z, the link from page X will show up as a link "via redirect" to page Z.

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