Quality & Trust

How We Verify Publishers

Every site on RankJet is manually reviewed before buyers can place orders on it. No auto-approval. No PBNs. No fake sites.

Last updated: March 2026

Why manual verification?

Most link marketplaces accept every submission automatically. The result: hundreds of domains with inflated metrics, inactive sites, and hidden PBN networks that undermine the value of your investment.

At RankJet, a human team member reviews every submitted site. That means we approve fewer sites than some competitors — but the ones we do approve are genuine.

Our verification process

1

Domain & ownership

We check that the applicant actually owns or has editorial control over the domain. This includes verifying WHOIS data, DNS records, and Google Search Console access where applicable.

2

Content originality & editorial

The site must contain original, human-authored content intended for real readers — no spun content, no spam networks, and no fully AI-generated pages with no editorial value.

3

Traffic & metrics quality

We look at organic traffic, domain rating (DR/DA), and backlink profile. Sites with inflated metrics, sudden traffic spikes, or unnatural link patterns are rejected.

4

Niche relevance & language

The site's primary niche and language must match what is listed. We reject listings that use misleading category or language descriptions.

5

Prohibited content check

We check for prohibited categories: adult content, illegal pharmaceuticals, online gambling (where not permitted), malware, and PBN-like structures.

6

Ongoing monitoring

Verification does not stop at approval. We periodically audit approved listings for quality drops, ownership changes, or policy violations. Buyers can also flag issues via their dashboards.

What we reject

  • Private Blog Networks (PBNs) or network sites
  • Domains with mostly auto-generated content
  • Sites with no real organic audience
  • Listings with inaccurate or misleading metrics
  • Sites owned by known spammers or link farms
  • Domains recently penalised by Google