You already know backlinks matter. But the way most people build them is slow, manual, and expensive. If you have ever stared at an empty comment box on a WordPress blog, wondering whether anyone will even approve your link, this article was written for you.
Backlink PRO changes that dynamic. It automates the repetitive parts of comment-based link building while keeping you in control. We are going to look at what the tool actually does, who it helps, where it fits into a wider SEO workload, and what to expect when you start using it. No magic promises. Just a practical breakdown.
What Backlink PRO Actually Does (And Why That Matters)
Backlink PRO is a desktop application for Windows that posts comments to WordPress-powered websites automatically. At its core, the software takes a list of target URLs, selects comment forms, fills them with randomized names, email addresses, and messages, and submits the comments at speed. The result is a growing footprint of backlinks pointing to the domains you specify.
The software ships with a built-in list of 5 million WordPress sites that allow comments. You do not need to scrape your own targets on day one. But you can also import your own lists—for example, URLs gathered from Ahrefs or Semrush while analyzing competitor backlink profiles. That alone makes it a flexible tool rather than a one-trick button.
Backlink PRO runs multiple threads, so it can process dozens of comment submissions simultaneously. It also saves progress automatically, generates HTML and Excel reports, and lets you manage blacklists to avoid posting on domains you have already covered or want to skip.
Why Comment Backlinks Still Work (When You Use Them Correctly)
Comment links are not what they were ten years ago. Most are nofollow by default, and Google has gotten better at ignoring spammy patterns. But that does not make them worthless. A well-placed comment on a real, indexed blog still passes referral traffic, builds secondary signals, and diversifies a link profile. Not every link needs to be a dofollow editorial placement to matter. When crawlers see a site mentioned across varied domains—blogs, forums, social platforms—it reinforces overall authority.
Backlink PRO is not trying to replace guest posting or digital PR. It is built for the volume layer. Use it to create a wide, natural-looking base of mentions, especially on pages that already rank for related terms. The key is not to blast a single brand anchor across 50,000 sites in one weekend. You vary your anchors, mix branded and generic text, and let the built-in randomization handle names and email variations so the footprint looks human.
Who Actually Uses Backlink PRO (And Who Should Not)
The marketing page lists several audiences: individual site owners, people running multiple websites, SEO consultants, backlink sellers, and agencies. In practice, the tool suits anyone who already understands that backlinks need volume and velocity, but does not want to burn hours on manual comment research and submission.
If you are a solo blogger trying to move a handful of pages from position 11 to position 6, Backlink PRO can help build supporting signals quickly. If you run a small agency juggling a dozen client sites, the reporting features and auto-save mean you can track progress across projects without building your own dashboard. If you sell backlink packages, the software gives you a repeatable, measurable way to fulfill orders at scale.
You should probably skip this tool if you expect instant page-one rankings from comment links alone. Backlink PRO does not create high-authority editorial links. It does not write custom, context-rich comments that guarantee approval. (It does let you customize message templates, but the content quality is your responsibility.) It also requires a Windows machine and a little patience during setup. If you are completely new to SEO, expect a short learning curve.
Setting Up Backlink PRO Without The Usual Headaches
Installation is straightforward: download the software, ensure .NET Framework 4.8 is installed, and run it on Windows 7, 8.1, 10, or 11 with at least 1 GB of RAM. The program generates a license code tied to your machine, email, and Envato purchase code. You send that license code to the developer, and activation usually happens within minutes—though occasionally it can stretch to 12 hours depending on the queue.
Once activated, you can start with the preloaded 5-million-site list or import your own CSV. The interface is functional rather than flashy. You set your target URL (the page you want backlinks to), add your comment templates, choose thread count, and hit start. The software handles the rest.
A practical tip: do not run it at maximum threads on a weak VPS right away. Start conservative, monitor your resource usage, then increase threads when you know the machine handles it. Also set up the blacklist feature early. It prevents you from accidentally resubmitting to the same domains and keeps your campaign efficient.
Understanding The Approval Lag
Backlink PRO submits comments. It does not force them through moderation queues. That means your links will not appear live instantly. Most comments sit in a WordPress pending queue until a site owner or moderator approves them. The developer notes that first backlinks can start appearing in Semrush or Ahrefs within a day after using the software, and after working through the 5-million-site list, results should become visible within 1 to 15 days.
This timeline varies enormously. Some sites auto-approve comments. Some never approve anything. Some mark all comments as spam. The software cannot control that. What it can do is increase your odds by submitting volume across a massive, diverse set of domains. Even a 1% approval rate on 5 million targets yields 50,000 backlinks.
Using Backlink PRO Alongside Ahrefs And Semrush
One of the more interesting workflows combines Backlink PRO with your existing SEO subscriptions. Instead of relying solely on the built-in list, you can export competitor backlink data from Ahrefs or Semrush, filter for WordPress sites that accept comments, and feed those URLs into the tool. This way you are not just collecting random links—you are building a backlink profile that mirrors successful competitors.
Here is a condensed decision flow for that approach:
| Step | Action | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Identify 2–3 ranking competitors for your target keyword. | Focuses effort on domains Google already rewards. |
| 2 | Export their backlink profiles from Ahrefs/Semrush. | Provides a raw list of linking domains. |
| 3 | Filter for WordPress-powered sites with open comments. | Narrows list to Backlink PRO’s compatible targets. |
| 4 | Import filtered URLs into Backlink PRO. | Runs high-intent campaign instead of random spraying. |
| 5 | Use varied anchor text and generic templates. | Reduces footprint patterns and improves approval odds. |
This workflow does not guarantee competitor-beating results, but it does give you a systematic method for filling gaps in your link profile that many site owners ignore.
What Backlink PRO Cannot Do (And Why That Is Fine)
No tool covers every use case. Backlink PRO does not create links on non-WordPress platforms. It does not handle forums, social networks, Web 2.0 properties, or sites with custom comment systems. It does not spin articles or write content. It does not guarantee dofollow links or specific PageRank flow.
These limitations matter because they set realistic expectations. If you need high-quality editorial links, you still need manual outreach or paid placements. If you need social signals, you need a different toolset entirely. Backlink PRO fits into a broader backlink strategy as the volume layer—the wide base of the pyramid, not the peak.
One underappreciated feature is the reporting dashboard. The automatic HTML and Excel reports show which domains received comments, timestamps, and status. That makes it easier to audit your backlinks later and prune anything that looks low-quality. You can also use the reports to demonstrate work to clients if you are an agency or freelancer.
Common Mistakes When Automating Comment Backlinks
Even with good software, people sabotage their own results. Here are the most frequent errors I see:
- Over-optimized anchor text. If every comment links to “cheap running shoes” or “best SEO tool,” Google notices. Use raw URLs, brand names, generic phrases like “click here,” and natural-sounding variations.
- Identical message templates. The software supports multiple templates and randomization. Use that. Write a dozen variations per campaign and let the tool cycle through them.
- Ignoring blacklists. Running the same campaign against the same domain list repeatedly wastes resources and creates a suspicious pattern. Blacklist processed domains after each run.
- Setting threads too high on shared hosting. You might hit rate limits or exhaust server resources, which slows everything down instead of speeding it up.
- Expecting comment links to rank pages alone. Comment links are supporting actors. They work best alongside other link types and good on-page SEO.
None of these are unique to Backlink PRO. They apply to any automated link-building effort. But because the tool makes it easy to submit at scale, the temptation to cut corners is real. A little discipline goes a long way.
The Licensing Model And What It Means For Multi-Site Owners
Backlink PRO uses a machine-locked license. One purchase covers one machine. If you need to install it on a second computer, you must buy another license. This is important for agencies and freelancers who work across multiple workstations or VPS instances.
Activation requires sending your license code and purchase details to the developer. Most users report quick turnaround, but you should plan for the occasional 12-hour wait, especially during weekends or holidays. Keep an eye on your spam folder during activation.
The license model is not unusual for desktop SEO tools, but it does mean you cannot swap installations freely. If you plan to run Backlink PRO on a dedicated VPS, install it there first and keep it there. Migrating might require re-activation support.
Where Backlink PRO Fits Into A Broader SEO Routine
Think of your backlink profile as a portfolio. You want some high-authority assets (editorial links, guest posts, niche edits) and a lot of smaller, diverse holdings (comments, profiles, citations). The small holdings do not move the needle individually, but together they create a natural link graph that supports your bigger bets.
Backlink PRO automates the small holdings. Use it during the early stages of a new site to build initial domain authority signals. Use it later to maintain link velocity so your profile does not go flat between larger link-building pushes. Use it to dilute an over-optimized anchor text ratio by injecting varied, low-stakes anchors across many domains.
A typical weekly workflow might look like this:
- Monday: Export fresh competitor backlink data and filter for WordPress targets.
- Tuesday: Set up a Backlink PRO campaign with new templates and imported URLs.
- Wednesday: Let the campaign run while you work on content or outreach. Check progress mid-day.
- Thursday: Review reports, blacklist processed domains, note any patterns in approval.
- Friday: Update anchor text rotation for next week based on what got approved.
This rhythm keeps the tool active without dominating your schedule. The auto-save and reporting handle the record-keeping, so you can focus on strategy.
Privacy, Footprints, And Responsible Automation
Any automated comment tool raises legitimate questions about footprints. Backlink PRO addresses some of this through randomization: random emails, random names, and user-supplied message templates that cycle. It does not force a single identity across all submissions. But no randomization is perfect. If you use the same IP address, the same domain targets, and the same three message templates for months, you will create a pattern.
Spread campaigns over time. Use proxies or a VPS with a clean reputation if you are concerned about IP-level footprints. Rotate the domains you target. Update your templates periodically—even small changes help. The goal is not to fool Google with a perfect disguise; it is to avoid obvious, lazy patterns that attract algorithmic filters.
Should You Buy Backlink PRO? A Quick Decision Checklist
Before you commit, run through these questions:
- Do I already have a basic understanding of how backlinks affect rankings?
- Do I need to build a large number of backlinks quickly without manual submission?
- Can I produce or curate comment templates that read like real human engagement?
- Do I have a Windows machine or VPS that meets the system requirements?
- Am I willing to wait days or weeks for moderation approvals to show results?
If you answered yes to most of these, Backlink PRO is worth a serious look. If you expect push-button rankings or need links from non-WordPress platforms, keep researching.
What Happens After You Start Your First Campaign
Day one will feel uneventful. The software runs, the logs fill, but your backlink count in Ahrefs stays flat. That is normal. Remember: comments sit in moderation queues. Check back after 48 hours. By day three or four, new referring domains should start trickling in. The real momentum builds as more site owners approve comments in batches.
Use that waiting period to refine your templates and build new target lists. The faster you feed fresh, high-quality URLs into the tool, the more efficient each subsequent campaign becomes. Over time, you develop a sense of which types of WordPress sites approve comments quickly and which ones never do. Feed that intel back into your blacklist and targeting strategy.
Recap: The Real Value Of Backlink PRO
Backlink PRO does not rewrite the rules of SEO. It automates a tedious, time-consuming task so you can scale one part of your backlink strategy without adding headcount or outsourcing to risky providers. It gives you the raw volume that supports the more prestigious links you earn elsewhere. And it does so with enough reporting and control features that you can audit your work and adjust course.
The tool is not for everyone. But if you are already spending hours on manual comment research or paying for backlink packages with opaque fulfillment, Backlink PRO offers a clear alternative: bring that layer in-house, control the process, and scale it on your terms.
Start with the free list. Test on a secondary domain if you are cautious. Watch what gets approved. Then decide how aggressively you want to build.

My Account
Five million sites pre-loaded is pretty crazy.
I’ve spent hours staring at blank comment boxes hoping for approvals.
Importing my own lists from Ahrefs saved me from starting from scratch.
I used to manually comment on 20 blogs per day. This automates the tedious form-filling so I can focus on finding better targets.
Randomized names and emails sound good, but I wonder how many of those comments actually stick long-term. Some sites auto-moderate aggressively, and if the content feels generic, they’ll just delete everything after a few days.
Desktop only, no Mac version, huh.
I once tried a similar tool that used scraped lists. Half the sites were dead. Having a curated built-in list might actually be the thing that makes this worth trying.
The randomized message part helped me avoid duplicate content flags on a small test run.
For a client with a new e-commerce site, manual outreach wasn’t scaling. Using this for tier-2 links toward their existing guest posts added a nice velocity bump without burning our main domains. Took a bit to dial in the comment tone, though.
Just make sure your landing page actually adds value, or the extra visits won’t convert.