Growing your website starts with reaching the right people.
Not random traffic.
People actively searching for the solutions you provide.
That’s where organic traffic shines.
Unlike paid advertising or social media, organic traffic attracts visitors with clear intent.
At Backlinko, organic traffic brings us over 571K monthly visitors—each one specifically interested in SEO and digital marketing.
In this guide, you’ll learn all about organic traffic, including how to measure and increase it.
Let’s start with what organic traffic is and how it differs from other traffic sources.
What Is Organic Traffic?
Organic traffic refers to visitors who land on your website or blog from unpaid search engine results.
Think of it as people finding your content naturally when they search for information, products, or services.
These unpaid clicks are organic traffic.
For example, if someone searches “seo competitor analysis” on Google and clicks on a regular (non-ad) result, that counts as organic traffic.
The key word here is “unpaid.”
While you might see “sponsored” or “ad” results at the top of search results, clicks on these aren’t organic traffic—they’re paid traffic.
You earn organic traffic by creating high-quality content that matches what people are searching for (search intent) and optimizing it for search engines (SEO).
Understanding Organic vs. Other Traffic Sources
Search engines aren’t the only way people find websites.
Visitors might come from social media, email newsletters, or by typing your URL directly.
Here’s how different traffic sources compare:
Traffic Source
How It Works
Best For
Organic
Users find you through unpaid search results
Building long-term authority and consistent traffic
Paid search
Users click your ads in search results
Quick traffic for specific campaigns
Direct
Users type your URL or use bookmarks
Returning visitors and brand awareness
Social
Users find you through social media
Brand awareness and community building
Email
Users click links in your emails
Nurturing leads and customer retention
Referral
Users click links from other websites
Building authority and partnerships
Why Organic Traffic Matters
Organic traffic isn’t just about reaching your target audience.
It’s about building assets that continue delivering value long after you create them.
Here’s why investing in organic search makes sense for businesses of all sizes.
Cost-Effective
Organic traffic is one of the most affordable ways to attract qualified visitors to your website.
This is especially true when you compare it to paid advertising, which costs anywhere from $0.11 to $0.50 per click, according to a WebFX survey.
Now, let’s consider a leading home improvement site, The Spruce, as an example.
They attract 9 million organic visitors monthly.
This traffic would cost them an estimated $7.1 million if they paid for it through Google Ads.
Pretty impressive, right?
As you can see, organic traffic can deliver incredible ROI compared to the ongoing costs of paid advertising.
Myth vs. fact: While organic traffic doesn’t require paying per click, it’s not exactly “free” either. At a minimum, you’ll be investing time into content creation and SEO. Many businesses also hire writers and editors to scale content production.
Builds Authority
Consistently ranking for search terms helps establish your site as an industry leader.
NerdWallet demonstrates this perfectly.
With 13.2 million monthly organic visitors and 5.2 million backlinks, they’ve become the go-to source for financial advice.
Their approach?
Creating comprehensive content that displays E-E-A-T (experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness) signals:
Author credentials and expertise
Regular content updates with accurate information
Citations to credible sources
Real-world experience and testing
Clear website policies and contact information
When they rank #1 on Google for terms like “best high yield savings account” or “how to invest in stocks,” it reinforces their position as a trusted voice in personal finance.
And helps them build website authority and confidence with every click.
Drives Targeted Traffic
When someone finds your site through organic search, they’re currently looking for what you offer.
Think about someone searching for “how to optimize a blog post.”
They’re not casually browsing—they’re sitting at their computer, working on content, and need guidance right now.
If your site ranks highly for this search, you’re reaching them at the perfect moment:
When they’re most likely to read your advice, implement your tips, or purchase a solution that helps them succeed.
That’s the power of organic traffic.
By consistently appearing in these high-intent searches, you connect with people precisely when your expertise matters most.
While paid campaigns stop delivering the moment you pause them, organic traffic compounds over time.
The key is creating content that matches what your audience is searching for at every funnel stage.
Including when they’re researching a problem, comparing solutions, or ready to make a purchase.
This builds a sustainable pipeline of qualified leads that continues growing long after you publish the content.
The best part? You don’t have to depend on daily ad spend.
Important: Consider organic traffic an investment rather than a quick win. While your exact timeline will vary based on industry, competition, and content strategy, it can take four to six months (or more) before you start seeing significant organic traffic growth.
How to Check Organic Traffic
Tracking your organic traffic reveals which content drives visitors and growth opportunities.
It also proves your SEO ROI.
These three tools make it easy.
Organic Research
Semrush’s Organic Research tool goes beyond basic traffic metrics to show you the full picture of your organic performance.
Now, you’ll see an overview of your site’s performance, including organic search.
For a breakdown of which search engines drive the most organic traffic to your site, scroll to the traffic acquisition report.
Next, click the plus sign to add a secondary dimension.
Select “Session source.”
Now, you’ll see an organic traffic breakdown by search engine.
Pro tip: Want to see which individual pages get the most organic traffic? Go to “Engagement” > “Pages and Screens” and add a secondary dimension of “Session source / medium.”
Google Search Console
While GA4 tracks all search engines, Google Search Console (GSC) focuses solely on Google traffic—giving you detailed data about your Google search performance.
Start by opening your GSC account and clicking “Performance” > “Search results” in the left sidebar.
Scroll to see the top queries and pages that attract organic traffic to your site.
You’ll learn how many clicks and impressions each one gets.
The tool will return a long list of keywords and metrics for each one.
Including:
Search volume: How many times per month a keyword is searched
Keyword difficulty (KD): This is a score from one to 100, showing how hard it’ll be to rank in Google’s top 10 for the given term
Intent: The reason behind a user’s search: they want information (informational), they want to compare options (commercial), they’re trying to find a specific site (navigational), or they want to buy something (transactional)
“LinkedIn marketing” gets 4,400 searches per month but has a daunting keyword difficulty of 95.
Let’s filter the results so we can find terms with lower difficulty.
Click “KD” on the menu and enter “0” and “49.”
Now, you’ll see only terms that are “easy” or “possible” to rank for.
As you review the list, look for terms that have:
Search intent aligned with your content type (how-to, product reviews, etc.)
Realistic competition levels for your site
Enough monthly searches to be worth targeting
Pro tip: Enter your domain into the AI-powered search bar in the Keyword Magic Tool. You’ll get a personalized difficulty score that shows which keywords are actually within reach for your site.
3. Refresh Existing Content
Want faster results?
Update existing content instead of only creating new posts.
Since Google already knows these pages exist, you’ll be more likely to see improvements quickly.
Your first step is to identify underperforming content that could benefit from a refresh.
Head to Google Search Console and click “Performance” > “Search results.”
This helps Google and visitors understand what they’ll find on the linked page.
Pro tip: Every time you publish a new post, spend five to 10 minutes adding relevant internal links from your existing content. This can help Google discover and rank your new content faster.
Bonus Step: Optimize Your Link Flow
Prioritize link equity by linking from high-authority pages to newer or lower-performing ones
Use topic clusters to organize related content into silos that strengthen overall relevance
Ensure crawl efficiency by avoiding excessive links on a single page
6. Build a Backlink Strategy
Backlinks remain one of Google’s strongest ranking signals.
The more relevant sites that link to you, the more organic traffic you can attract.
But how do you earn these valuable links?
Start by creating content that naturally attracts them.
The most linkable content types we’ve found include:
Original research and industry studies
Comprehensive how-to guides that fill knowledge gaps
Free tools and templates
Expert roundups with unique insights
Attractive visuals (like infographics)
For example, we created a detailed analysis of Google’s ranking factors that has attracted 33.7K backlinks to date.
Why did it work so well?
Because it’s a comprehensive resource with over 200 ranking factors.
And we constantly update it to ensure it features the freshest information and studies.
But creating linkable assets isn’t your only option for boosting backlinks and organic traffic.
Build genuine industry relationships by joining relevant Slack, Facebook, and Reddit communities and participating in discussions.
Focus on adding value first—answer questions, share insights, and build real connections.
Only include links to your site when relevant and helpful (and if allowed by the community).
Want to accelerate your link building?
Study what’s already working in your industry.
Use Semrush’s Backlink Analytics to monitor your competitors’ backlinks.