Link Marketplaces (Link Exchanges)

Services for buying and selling backlinks: Miralinks, GoGetLinks, Sape. How they work, risks, and their role in the Russian market.

In brief

Link marketplaces are online platforms where webmasters sell links from their sites and SEO specialists buy them for promotion. In the Russian internet (Runet), the link market is legalised and widespread, unlike Western SEO where link buying is typically hidden and done via outreach.

A link marketplace is an intermediary between sellers (site owners who rent out link space) and buyers (SEO specialists who want backlinks). In the Russian internet (Runet) this market has existed openly for almost 20 years. The best-known platforms are Miralinks, GoGetLinks, Sape, Rotapost, GetGoodLinks, and others.

Western search engines (Google) officially forbid buying links to manipulate PageRank. However, in Runet, marketplaces continue to operate, and many SEOs use them for 'grey' or conditionally white-hat links.

Main Platforms in Runet

  • Miralinks — article marketplace. You order a post (or submit a ready one) on a donor site. The article stays forever and looks natural. Considered the safest among marketplaces.
  • GoGetLinks (GGL) — also an article marketplace with a focus on quality sites and moderation. More expensive than Miralinks, but donors are carefully selected.
  • Sape — rental link marketplace. You pay monthly for a link, usually placed in the footer or sidebar. High risk of penalties, mostly used for Tier 2/3 or aggressive grey schemes.

Risks and Google Algorithms

Google regularly updates algorithms (Penguin, SpamBrain) to detect paid links. Main risks of marketplace links:

  • Anchor over-optimisation — many buyers use exact-match commercial anchors, quickly triggering Penguin.
  • Low-quality donors — marketplaces have many low-quality sites (doorways, PBNs, link farms).
  • Spam footprints — footer, sidebar links, identical link text across hundreds of sites.
  • Manual actions — Google may issue a manual action for 'link schemes'.
TXT
Typical signs of a marketplace link that Google sees:
- Sudden growth of links from similar donors
- Identical placement pattern (footer, widget)
- Many links from the same IP / hosting provider
- Anchors are only commercial exact match
- Outbound links to hundreds of unrelated topics

How to Use Marketplaces with Minimal Risk

  • Choose article marketplaces (Miralinks, GGL) over rental ones (Sape).
  • Carefully select donors: high traffic, natural profile, no spam.
  • Use diverse anchors: 60–70% branded/generic, 20–30% partial, 5–10% exact match.
  • Do not build all links in a short period — spread over several months.
  • Combine marketplaces with outreach, crowd links, and natural mentions.
Since 2020, Google has intensified its fight against link spam. Using link marketplaces without caution can lead to penalisation or de-indexing.

Common questions

Legally, yes. Link advertising is not prohibited. But search engines consider it a violation of webmaster guidelines.
It’s risky. For a young site, it’s better to use only crowd marketing, outreach, and natural links for the first 6–12 months, and marketplaces only for dilution or Tier 2/3.
Algorithms analyse hundreds of signals: placement pattern, anchors, donor history, link velocity, presence of other marketplace links. Google may also analyse public marketplace data.
Miralinks is cheaper and has more donors, but quality varies. GoGetLinks has stricter moderation and higher prices. For beginners — Miralinks, for bigger budgets — GGL.
If you honestly buy links, Google’s rules require rel="sponsored" or nofollow. But marketplaces sell them as dofollow. That is the main risk — mismatch with Google’s expectations.
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Link Marketplaces (Link Exchanges) — What is it?