Internal linking for AI search
By Abhijay Tondak, Founder · Updated June 25, 2026 · 5 min read
Internal linking helps AI search engines discover your pages, understand how your content connects, and judge which pages are most central to a topic. Descriptive links from your supporting content to your canonical pages concentrate authority where you most want to be cited.
Key takeaways
- Internal links route both crawlers and authority toward your most important pages.
- Descriptive anchor text tells engines what the linked page is about.
- A hub-and-spoke structure signals which page is the canonical answer for a topic.
- Link from new supporting content back to your pillar pages, not just outward.
- Avoid orphan pages - content with no internal links is hard to discover and trust.
What internal links do for AI engines
AI search systems still rely on crawling and the link graph to find and contextualize content. Internal links do three jobs at once: they help crawlers discover pages, they pass relevance and authority between related pages, and they map the relationships in your content so an engine can see which page is the definitive treatment of a subject.
When several supporting pages link to one canonical page with consistent, descriptive anchors, you're telling the engine 'this is the page that answers this question.' That concentration is what raises the odds that the canonical page is the one cited.
Anchor text is a label, not decoration
The words you link with describe the destination. 'Click here' tells an engine nothing; 'how to track AI citations' tells it exactly what the linked page covers. Treat anchor text as a short, honest label for the target page.
- Use descriptive, topic-bearing anchors that match the destination's subject.
- Vary the phrasing naturally instead of repeating one exact string everywhere.
- Keep anchors honest - the linked page must actually deliver what the anchor promises.
- Avoid stuffing every paragraph with links; relevance beats volume.
Build a hub-and-spoke topic structure
Organize content as clusters: a pillar page that gives the canonical answer for a broad topic, surrounded by supporting pages that go deep on subtopics. Each supporting page links up to the pillar, and the pillar links down to its supporting pages. This structure makes the topical relationships legible and tells engines where authority sits.
The most common mistake is linking only outward to other sites or only forward to newer posts. Authority flows along links, so deliberately route it back toward the pages you most want cited - your pillars and your highest-converting answers.
Find and fix the gaps
A few recurring problems quietly suppress AI visibility.
- Orphan pages: strong content with no inbound internal links - nearly invisible to crawlers.
- Pillar pages with thin inbound linking - authority never concentrates on them.
- Generic anchors ('read more') that carry no topical signal.
- Deep pages buried many clicks from any entry point - discovered late, crawled rarely.
- Broken or redirected internal links that waste crawl budget and signal neglect.
Frequently asked questions
Do internal links really affect AI citations?
Indirectly but meaningfully. They help engines discover pages, understand topical relationships, and judge which page is canonical for a subject - all inputs to which page gets cited for a query.
How many internal links should a page have?
Enough to connect it to its topic cluster and its pillar, no more. Relevance matters more than count; a handful of well-placed, descriptive links beats a wall of them.
What is an orphan page and why is it a problem?
An orphan page has no internal links pointing to it. Crawlers struggle to find it and engines have little context for it, so even excellent content can go undiscovered and uncited.
Put this into practice — free.
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