Spend any time around SEO and you will hear people talk about a site's "DA" as though it were a fixed, official grade — proof of how good a website is. It is one of the most widely cited numbers in digital marketing, and also one of the most widely misunderstood. Domain authority is genuinely useful when you know what it is, and genuinely misleading when you do not. This guide explains what domain authority is, what it definitely is not, how it is worked out, and how to use it without falling into the trap of chasing the number for its own sake.
What it is
Domain Authority (DA) is a score, created by SEO software companies, that predicts how likely a website is to rank well in search engine results. It is usually expressed on a scale from 1 to 100, where a higher score suggests a greater ability to rank.
The crucial words are predicts and created by SEO software companies. Domain Authority is a third-party estimate — a model built by tool providers (the term was popularised by Moz, and rival tools have their own versions under different names) to approximate how ranking strength might work. It is an informed guess about competitiveness, not a measurement handed down by search engines.
What it is not: a Google ranking factor
This is the single most important thing to understand, and the most commonly confused. Domain Authority is not a metric that Google uses. Google did not invent it, does not publish it, and has stated plainly that it does not use a single overall "domain authority" score in its ranking systems.
In other words, raising your DA does not directly cause Google to rank you higher, because Google never looks at your DA in the first place. DA is an external attempt to model something complex; it is not the thing itself.
Think of domain authority like a pundit's prediction of a match, not the referee's decision. The prediction can be insightful and worth listening to — but it has no power over the actual result. Confusing the two is where most domain authority mistakes begin.
Why does the distinction matter so much? Because people who believe DA is an official score start optimising for the score rather than for the things that genuinely help them rank. That is a subtle but costly error, and avoiding it is the whole point of understanding what DA really is.
How domain authority is calculated
Each tool guards its exact formula, but the broad inputs are well understood. The dominant factor is a site's backlink profile — the quantity and, above all, the quality of links pointing to it from other websites.
Because DA leans so heavily on links, it is closely related to the wider role that backlinks play in SEO. Factors that tend to feed a domain authority score include:
- The number of linking websites, weighted heavily by their own quality
- The authority of those linking sites — links from strong sites count for more
- The relevance and naturalness of the link profile overall
- The overall size and link structure of the site
| Influences DA strongly | Influences DA little or not at all |
|---|---|
| Quality of backlinks | The colour of your buttons |
| Authority of linking sites | A single new blog post |
| Overall link profile | Your social media follower count |
Scores are also logarithmic and comparative, which has two practical consequences. First, moving from 20 to 30 is far easier than moving from 70 to 80 — gains get harder as you climb. Second, a score only means anything relative to other scores; there is no absolute "good" number in isolation.
How to use domain authority sensibly
Used correctly, DA is a handy tool. Used as a goal in itself, it leads you astray. The healthy uses are all comparative.
- Benchmark against competitors. Comparing your DA with that of direct competitors gives a rough sense of how you stack up and how hard the field is to compete in.
- Track your own trend. Watching your score over time tells you whether your efforts are broadly moving things in the right direction, which is more meaningful than any single reading.
- Assess potential link sources. When considering where a backlink might come from, a site's authority is one rough indicator of how valuable that link could be.
What you should not do is obsess over the exact figure, compare scores across wildly different industries as if they were equivalent, or treat a higher number as the objective. DA is a thermometer, not a thing to manufacture.
This is also why DA fits within a bigger picture rather than standing alone. It reflects the cumulative effect of good work across your SEO and the depth of your content pillars: strong content earns links, links build authority, and metrics like DA register the result.
Chase authority, not the score
The productive mindset is to pursue genuine authority and let the metric follow. Genuine authority comes from the same fundamentals that underpin all of SEO:
- Publish content worth linking to — genuinely useful guides, research and resources that attract links naturally.
- Earn quality backlinks from trusted, relevant sites, the safe and durable way rather than through schemes.
- Build a technically sound, trustworthy site that both people and search engines find easy to use.
Do those things and your real standing improves — and as a side effect, scores like domain authority tend to rise too. Try to game the metric directly, by buying or spamming links to inflate it, and you risk penalties while building nothing of lasting value. The score is a reflection of authority, not a substitute for it.
The bottom line
Domain Authority is a third-party score, invented by SEO tools, that predicts how likely a website is to rank well in search. The essential caveat is that it is not a Google ranking factor — search engines do not use it, so it models ranking strength rather than determining it. It runs roughly from 1 to 100, is comparative rather than absolute, gets harder to improve as it rises, and is driven largely by a site's backlink profile. Use it sensibly: benchmark against competitors, track your own trend, and gauge potential link sources — but do not chase the number itself. Pursue real authority through excellent content and quality links, and metrics like DA will look after themselves.