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Link Finder Review: A Price-Comparison Engine for Buying Backlinks

By: AI Collection

At a glance

If you have ever bought a guest post or a paid backlink, you know the quiet anxiety of not knowing whether you paid a fair price. The same placement can cost €40 on one marketplace and three times that on another, and there is no public price book. Link Finder is built squarely for that moment: it pulls listings from many link-selling marketplaces into one search box so you can see who has a spot and what it actually costs before you spend.

Link Finder homepage — "Find the best links, at the best prices, in just 10 seconds" headline above a free search box

The problem it actually solves

Paid link building is fragmented. Sponsored-post inventory is spread across dozens of separate vendor sites, each with its own catalogue, login, and pricing. Comparing them by hand is slow, and it is where most of the overpaying happens.

Link Finder collapses that into a single index. The homepage claims more than 300,000 listed sites and pitches an average saving of "30% per link," with results in roughly ten seconds. An independent walkthrough by the French SEO blog Neovibration describes a "database of more than 100,000 sites listed," spanning French and international platforms — so treat the exact catalogue size as a moving target and check coverage for your own niche, but the core idea holds: it is a price-comparison and discovery layer sitting on top of the link-buying market, not a marketplace of its own. You still transact on the third-party vendor.

What you can do with it

The product is more than a price table. The headline features, as described on the site and corroborated by the Neovibration review, are:

  • AI Search — you enter your site, list competitors, and describe the campaign goal; it returns candidate placements, each with a proprietary "LinkFinder Score (LS)" meant to rank relevance.
  • Competitor link-gap search — feed in rival domains and it surfaces the links they have that you can also buy, so you can close the gap directly.
  • Keyword / SERP search — find purchasable links on pages already ranking for the terms you care about.
  • Bulk search — import a domain list and get availability and the lowest price for each in one pass.
  • Chrome extension — spot sites selling links straight from the search results as you browse.
  • Projects, backlink monitoring, and a forum finder — build a link wishlist, get alerted when a live link drops, and dig up phpBB forums.

Link Finder's link-building services page

The throughline is speed: every feature is about shrinking the hours normally spent juggling vendor tabs into a single query.

What it costs

Pricing is monthly and tiered by volume rather than by feature, which is the right model for a tool whose value scales with how much link buying you do. The published plans run from a Standard tier at $13/month up to a Booster tier at $41/month and a top Spammer tier at $83/month.

The numbers that matter are the usage caps. Standard is genuinely entry-level — about 300 results per search, 50 keyword searches, and 100 monitored backlinks a month — which is fine for an occasional buyer but tight for an agency. Booster lifts that to 1,000 results per search and 250 keyword searches; Spammer pushes to 30,000 results and 2,000 keyword searches for teams running link building at scale. Work out your monthly search volume first, because the cheap tier can run dry faster than the price suggests.

Who it's a good fit for

This is a tool for people who have already decided that paid link building is part of their strategy: SEO freelancers, link-building agencies, and in-house marketers who buy placements regularly and want to stop overpaying. If you buy even a handful of links a month, the price-comparison angle can plausibly pay for the subscription. Its roots show a clear tilt toward the French and wider European market — the on-site testimonials and the independent reviews are predominantly French — so it is likely strongest there.

The caveat you can't skip

Be clear-eyed about what this category is. Link Finder is a tool for buying links that pass ranking signals, and Google's own link-spam guidance treats paid links intended to manipulate rankings as a violation of its policies. The tool makes the buying cheaper and faster; it does not make it sanctioned. Whether that trade-off is worth it depends entirely on your risk tolerance and how aggressively you want to play. A review can tell you the tool does its job well; it can't tell you the underlying tactic is safe for your site. Go in knowing that.

A few things to verify before you commit

  • Coverage for your market. The listing-count and marketplace figures vary between the site's own pages and third-party write-ups. Run the free search on your real target keywords and confirm the inventory is deep enough for your language and niche before paying.
  • The social proof is mostly first-party. The glowing testimonials live on Link Finder's own homepage, and there is little independent community discussion to cross-check them against — no Hacker News threads, and thin third-party coverage for what looks like a fairly young tool (the earliest web archive of the site dates to late 2024). The free search exists precisely so you can judge it yourself; use it.

FAQ

Does Link Finder sell the links itself? No. It aggregates and compares listings from external link-selling marketplaces. You discover and price placements in Link Finder, then buy them from the underlying vendor.

Is there a free way to try it? Yes — the site offers a free search from the homepage, which is the sensible first step given how much the value depends on coverage for your specific keywords.

Is buying links through it safe for SEO? That's the wrong question to ask the tool. Link Finder makes paid link building efficient, but paid links that pass ranking signals fall foul of Google's link-spam policies regardless of where you source them. The risk is in the tactic, not the software.

Sources consulted

Published on: June 2, 2026

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