Backlinks are one of the most important signals for WordPress SEO, but manual link building can eat up your entire week. The research, the outreach, the follow-ups—it’s a grind that doesn’t always pay off on the first try. So what if you could automate the repetitive parts and free up hours while still building quality backlinks? That’s exactly what this list covers.
We’ll walk through nine practical WordPress backlink solutions that work with plugins, built-in features, and smart third-party tools. Some are fully automatic; others need a little setup and then run on their own. None of them are spammy shortcuts that will get your site penalized. By the end, you’ll know which ones fit your site, your skill level, and your time budget—and you’ll probably reclaim a few evenings along the way.
1. Let Broken Link Checker Fix Opportunities While You Sleep
Broken links are low-hanging fruit—except nobody has time to hunt them down manually across hundreds of pages. A plugin like Broken Link Checker scans your site (and external links) around the clock and flags dead URLs right in your WordPress dashboard. When you fix a broken link by pointing it to fresh content, you keep link equity flowing internally and avoid losing visitors to 404 errors. But here’s where it turns into a backlink tactic: the plugin can also find broken outbound links on your own site that you can replace with a working resource—sometimes your own related post.
There’s an even bigger play here. Use a tool like Ahrefs or Semrush (not free, but they do the heavy lifting) to find broken links on other people’s sites that used to point to content similar to yours. Reach out quickly, mention the dead link, and suggest your live article as a replacement. Because you’re helping them fix a problem, the response rate is higher than cold outreach. Automate the broken-link discovery part, and you’re left with only a few minutes of actual email sending per prospect.
Just don’t set Broken Link Checker to scan too aggressively on a shared host; it can tax server resources. Most people set it to check once every 72 hours and call it done.
2. Turn Internal Link Suggestions into SEO Gains with Link Whisper
Internal links might not sound like “backlinks,” but they work on the same principle: passing authority from one page to another. When your internal linking is sloppy, you’re leaving ranking power on the table. Link Whisper scans your existing content and suggests relevant internal links as you write—or even retroactively across old posts. One-click insertion means you’re not manually searching through your archives every time you publish.
Why does this matter for backlinks? A site with clear internal link paths helps search engines understand your content structure, which can lift the pages you actually want to rank. And when those pages rank higher, they naturally attract more external backlinks because people link to resources they find easily.
There’s a subtle pitfall: auto-suggested links aren’t always contextually perfect. A quick human sanity-check before hitting “publish” keeps things natural. But for the time it saves—especially on large sites—this is one of the closest things to a set-it-and-forget-it backlink helper.
3. Automate Social Syndication to Seed Your Content Everywhere
Social signals aren’t direct ranking factors, but a post that gets shared widely has a much better chance of catching a blogger’s eye and earning a real backlink. The problem is manually posting to Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, and whatever new network popped up this month. That’s where automated syndication plugins come in.
Blog2Social or Jetpack Social can push your new post to all your connected profiles the moment you hit publish—or on a schedule you set. Some will even re-share old posts at intervals so your archive keeps getting exposure. The key here is customization: you don’t want the same generic blurb on every platform. Spend ten minutes setting up platform-specific templates once, and the plugin handles the variations forever.
One warning: full automation without human interaction can make your feeds look robotic. A better approach is to let the tool handle the initial posts, and you jump in occasionally for a genuine reply or comment. That blend keeps your accounts active without chaining you to a social media calendar.
4. RSS-to-Email Campaigns That Bring Readers—and Backlinks—Back
Email isn’t the first channel people think of for link building, but a newsletter that automatically pulls your latest posts via RSS has a quiet power. When subscribers get a well-formatted email with your new content, a small percentage will share it, bookmark it, or reference it on their own blogs. Over months, those tiny actions add up to organic backlinks you never had to request.
MailPoet or Newsletter Glue can hook directly into WordPress and turn your RSS feed into branded emails that go out on a schedule—daily, weekly, whatever fits your pace. You write the post; the plugin handles the rest. One tweak that helps: include a short “why this matters” note at the top of each automated email so it doesn’t feel like a raw feed dump. A little personality goes a long way toward getting clicks.
5. Repurpose Content into Visual Assets with Automated Tools
Infographics, quote cards, and simple data visuals earn backlinks at a higher rate than plain text posts. But designing them manually for every article is a non-starter when you’re short on time. Tools like Canva’s bulk create feature (driven by a CSV) or automated screenshot plugins that turn blog sections into social graphics can take over the busywork.
Once you have a visual asset, upload it to your post and optimize the alt text. Then use a sharing plugin like Social Snap to add a Pinterest-specific image tag that gets pinned automatically when someone uses your share buttons. Pinterest pins often outlive tweets by years and can bring steady referral traffic—and occasional editorial backlinks—long after you’ve forgotten about the post.
Don’t expect every visual to go viral. But if even one out of ten posts gets picked up by a roundup post or resource page because of a clear chart or graphic, you’ve built a backlink without any outreach effort.
6. Automate Directory and Niche Listing Submissions (Carefully)
Directories get a bad rap, and for good reason: spammy general directories are worthless. But niche-specific, curated directories still send real traffic and pass relevant link equity. The tedious part is filling out the same business details on fifteen different sites. A service like BrightLocal or Yext can push your WordPress site’s information to dozens of relevant directories at once and keep listings consistent when your details change.
For WordPress-specific directories, there are smaller curated lists—theme showcases, plugin directories, local business associations—that often accept submissions manually but don’t take long to fill out. Focus on the ones that actually get visited by your target audience, not the ones that promise “1000 backlinks instantly.” A single .edu or .org directory listing from a relevant niche can outweigh a hundred automated spam submissions.
The rule of thumb: if the directory has a review process and a human behind it, it’s probably worth the five minutes. If it auto-approves anything, skip it.
7. Set Up Automatic Link Monitoring and Alerts
You can’t fix what you don’t know is broken. Plugins like Link Checker Professional or external tools like Google Search Console (free) and Ahrefs (paid) can monitor your backlink profile and alert you when you gain—or lose—important links. Losing a high-quality backlink without noticing can quietly erode your rankings over weeks. An automated alert lets you reach out to the linking site and gently ask if they’d consider restoring the link, perhaps because they updated their page and removed it accidentally.
On the flip side, monitoring for new backlinks helps you spot unexpected wins. If a popular blog links to one of your posts without telling you, that’s a relationship you might want to nurture. A quick thank-you email or a social share from your end can turn a one-time link into an ongoing connection. None of this is automated in a “set and forget” sense, but the monitoring and alerting piece runs on its own, saving you from constantly refreshing reports.
8. Automate Testimonial and Review Link Building
Companies love showcasing customer testimonials, and they often link back to the customer’s website. If you use tools or services that have a “testimonials” or “case studies” page, writing a short, genuine testimonial can earn you a contextual backlink from a domain you already trust. The time-saver here isn’t the writing—it’s finding the opportunities.
Use a tool like Google Alerts (free) or Mention to track brand names of products you already use, plus phrases like “customer stories” or “submit a testimonial.” When a relevant page pops up, you’ll get an email. You spend two minutes writing an honest blurb, and often the link appears within days. Because the outreach is reversed (they want your testimonial), the conversion rate on your time is extremely high.
9. Tap into Automated Content Curation and Roundups
Curated content roundups—weekly link lists in your niche—are a staple of many blogs. Getting included usually means someone on the curator’s team found your post. You can increase those odds by making your content easy to discover and formatting it in ways curators love.
Use a plugin like Yoast SEO or Rank Math to automatically generate clean meta titles and descriptions that stand out in RSS readers. Enable rich snippets for author name, date, and featured image so your posts look clickable when pulled into curation tools. You can also use a service like Zapier to push new posts into relevant Slack communities or Discord channels where curators hang out—just once, not spammed repeatedly.
The real efficiency here is setting up the discovery pipelines once. When your post goes live, it flows into places where link-builders and newsletter editors are already looking for fresh material. You don’t have to pitch; you just have to be visible.
Picking the Right Mix for Your Site
None of these solutions will magically build a hundred backlinks overnight, and that’s by design. Automated link building works best when it handles the repetitive, time-sucking parts while leaving the genuinely human moments—like writing a testimonial or replying to a broken-link request—brief and manageable. Start with the one that fixes your biggest bottleneck. If you’re publishing often and nobody sees it, focus on automated social syndication. If your old posts are bleeding link equity, set up broken-link monitoring this week.
The goal isn’t to replace thoughtful link strategy with robots; it’s to clear the clutter so you have time for the things machines can’t fake. Pick two and set them up. In a month, you’ll probably wonder why you ever did it all by hand.

My Account
Broken links as backlink opportunities, never thought of that.
Does the Broken Link Checker plugin actually help with external backlinks or just internal?
I tried automated outreach once and it felt too templated. Hope these tools are different.
Worried that some of these so-called automated solutions might cross into grey hat territory. The article says not spammy, but I’d need to see proof.
For a WooCommerce site with thousands of product pages, manual backlink research is impossible. Something like number 3 might finally help me scale without hiring extra hands.
No, manual outreach still beats automation for relationship building.
You mentioned plugins run on their own after setup—does that mean they keep finding new opportunities without me touching them? How often do they need reconfiguration?
Smart third-party tools are the real game changer here.
How exactly do you avoid those automated solutions looking spammy? I’ve seen tools that blast generic emails and ruin your domain reputation. Does the article cover any filtering or personalization techniques?
I like that some are set-and-forget, I barely have time to write posts.
Won’t Google catch on?
I manage a few client sites and the broken link tactic might be my new favorite time saver. Just install, scan overnight, and fix in the morning—perfect for maintenance packages.
Calling them fully automatic is a stretch if you still need to set them up.
With the third-party tools mentioned, do they integrate directly with WordPress plugins like Yoast, or do you have to mess with code? I’m not a developer and would hate to break something while trying to save a few hours.
Finally, something that respects my sleep schedule.