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Top 5 Sites to Monetize Your Blog With Guest Posting

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Want to monetize blog guest posting the smart way? Here are 5 real platforms for backlink monetization, what they cost, and how they actually work.

Most bloggers hit the same wall around month six: traffic is decent, the writing is solid, but the bank account doesn’t care. You’ve tried ads, maybe an affiliate link or two, and the numbers still look embarrassing next to the hours you’ve put in. Guest posting and backlink monetization are two of the fastest ways to close that gap — if you know which platforms are worth your time and which ones will quietly tank your domain authority.

This isn’t a list scraped together from other “best guest posting sites” roundups. It’s based on what actually moves the needle: where real publishers go to buy and sell placements, what they pay, and the tradeoffs nobody puts in the marketing copy. By the end, you’ll know exactly where to list your blog, what to charge, and what to avoid.

What Guest Posting and Backlink Monetization Actually Mean

Guest posting monetization works two ways: you either get paid to publish someone else’s article (often with a contextual backlink baked in), or you sell space within your existing content for a backlink placement. Either way, you’re renting out your domain authority — the trust Google has built up in your site over time.

This matters for revenue because sites with decent traffic and a clean backlink profile become valuable real estate for SEO agencies and businesses trying to rank their own pages. It matters for your own SEO too, since incoming guest content (done right) can diversify your site and bring referral traffic. Done wrong, it can get you a manual action. More on that later.

1. Fiverr

Fiverr isn’t built specifically for guest posting, but it’s become one of the largest informal marketplaces for it. Search “guest post” and you’ll find thousands of sellers offering placements on their own blogs, and plenty of buyers — bloggers included — listing their own sites for sale as guest post hosts.

Pricing: Gigs typically range from $15 for low-quality, low-traffic placements up to $300+ for sites with real authority and traffic. (Exact pricing shifts constantly with Fiverr’s marketplace dynamics, so treat these as ballpark figures, not guarantees.)

Pros:

  • Zero barrier to entry — you can list a gig today
  • Built-in payment protection and dispute resolution
  • Massive buyer pool means consistent demand

Cons:

  • The marketplace is flooded with low-quality PBN-style sites, which drags down buyer trust and your visible competition
  • Fiverr takes a 20% cut
  • You’ll spend real time filtering serious buyers from bottom-feeders

Best for: Beginners who want to test demand for their site without setting up a separate sales funnel.

Practical tip: Don’t undercut yourself to compete with the $15 gigs. Put your traffic screenshots and a real backlink profile audit in your gig description — buyers doing actual SEO work will pay more to avoid junk sites, and that’s the buyer you want.

2. Adsy

Adsy is a dedicated content marketplace where publishers list their blogs and advertisers buy guest posts or link insertions directly. It’s more structured than Fiverr — you set your site’s price once, and orders come in through Adsy’s dashboard rather than a gig listing.

Pricing: Publisher payouts vary by domain authority and traffic, generally landing somewhere between $25 and $150+ per post for established blogs. Adsy keeps a commission on each sale (reportedly competitive with other marketplaces, though you should confirm current rates in your dashboard since these change).

Pros:

  • Cleaner, more professional buyer base than Fiverr
  • You control which content gets published — reject anything off-brand
  • Recurring buyers are common once you’ve built a track record

Cons:

  • Approval process means you can’t start selling immediately
  • Smaller buyer volume than Fiverr, especially for newer or lower-DA sites

Best for: Intermediate bloggers with established niche authority who want predictable, semi-passive income from existing traffic.

Practical tip: Set niche restrictions in your profile (no CBD, no gambling, no crypto if that’s not your space). It narrows your buyer pool slightly but keeps your link profile coherent, which matters more long-term than maximizing every possible sale.

3. Whitepress

Whitepress leans more European but has expanded its publisher network globally. It functions as a structured exchange: publishers set pricing tiers, advertisers browse by niche and traffic metrics, and the platform handles the transaction and content approval workflow.

Pricing: Publisher earnings depend heavily on your site’s metrics (organic traffic, DA, niche). Mid-tier blogs commonly see offers in the $50–$200 range per placement, though high-authority sites can command significantly more. Treat these as estimates — Whitepress pricing is metric-driven and fluctuates.

Pros:

  • Strong filtering tools mean you mostly deal with legitimate advertisers
  • Transparent dashboard for tracking orders and payouts
  • Good fit if your audience or niche skews international

Cons:

  • Onboarding can feel slower and more bureaucratic than Fiverr or Adsy
  • Less useful if your blog is purely US-focused with a small niche

Best for: Bloggers with international or European traffic, or niche sites in finance, business, or lifestyle categories that attract corporate advertisers.

Practical tip: Fill out every metrics field honestly. Whitepress buyers tend to be more data-driven than impulse buyers on Fiverr, so an incomplete profile gets skipped over even if your traffic is genuinely good.

4. PostJoint

PostJoint operates differently — it’s built around relationship-based guest posting rather than pure link-buying. Publishers list their sites with editorial guidelines, and writers or brands pitch content ideas rather than just paying for a slot.

Pricing: PostJoint itself doesn’t always involve a direct cash payment per post; some publishers use it for content exchange or smaller flat fees per accepted pitch, often in the $30–$100 range depending on negotiated terms. This is more variable than the fixed-price marketplaces above, so confirm terms case by case.

Pros:

  • Higher editorial quality overall, since pitches go through approval
  • Lower risk of low-effort spam content cluttering your blog
  • Better for building genuine contributor relationships, not just transactions

Cons:

  • Less predictable income than flat-fee marketplaces
  • Smaller platform overall, meaning fewer active buyers at any given time

Best for: Niche bloggers who care as much about content quality and reader trust as they do about the payout — think personal finance, health, or B2B blogs where one bad guest post can hurt credibility.

Practical tip: Use PostJoint’s pitch system to negotiate a content swap plus a small fee, rather than fee-only. You often end up with better-written content for your own site as part of the deal.

5. Authority Builders

Authority Builders is closer to a vetted SEO link-building network. It’s stricter about which publishers it accepts (real traffic, clean history, no obvious PBN signals), which makes it slower to join but more valuable once you’re in.

Pricing: Because it’s a curated network, payouts skew higher than open marketplaces — often $100+ per placement for sites that meet their quality bar. Exact figures aren’t publicly fixed and depend on individual site review, so confirm current terms directly before committing.

Pros:

  • Higher per-post payouts due to stricter publisher vetting
  • Buyers are typically agencies doing serious, sustained link campaigns
  • Being accepted is itself a small trust signal for your site

Cons:

  • Application and review process can take time, and not every blog gets approved
  • Smaller, newer blogs without traffic history will likely get rejected

Best for: Established bloggers with a genuine traffic and content history looking for higher-value, lower-volume placements instead of constant small sales.

Practical tip: Apply once your site has at least six months of consistent publishing and some organic traffic to show. Applying too early just burns a rejection you’ll have to wait out before reapplying.

Comparison Table

PlatformCost to JoinNiche FocusEase of UsePayout Potential
FiverrFree (20% commission)All nichesVery easyLow–Medium
AdsyFree (commission-based)All niches, filterableEasyMedium
WhitepressFree (commission-based)International, business-leaningModerateMedium–High
PostJointFreeNiche/editorial-focusedModerateLow–Medium, variable
Authority BuildersFree, but vetted applicationAll niches, quality-gatedHarder to enterHigh

Note: Commission structures and payout ranges shift over time on every platform listed. Verify current pricing directly on each site before setting your rates.

Risks and Best Practices

Here’s the part most “top 5” articles skip: Google has been explicit that buying or selling links purely to manipulate rankings violates its webmaster guidelines, and it has run multiple link-spam updates specifically targeting this. That doesn’t mean guest posting is dead — it means doing it carelessly is risky.

A few things worth taking seriously:

  • Use rel=”sponsored” or rel=”nofollow” on paid links. This is the FTC and Google’s expected disclosure standard, and ignoring it is the fastest way to draw a manual action.
  • Avoid link farms and obvious PBNs, both as a buyer and seller. If a site’s entire content output looks like an ad rotation, your link sitting next to it won’t help you — it’ll flag you.
  • Disclose sponsored content clearly to readers, not just search engines. It’s an FTC requirement in the US, and readers genuinely respond better to transparency than to disguised ads.
  • Don’t oversaturate your own blog with paid guest posts. A blog that’s 80% sponsored content loses reader trust and, eventually, the organic traffic that made it valuable in the first place.

Honestly, the bloggers who do best at this long-term aren’t the ones chasing every sale — they’re the ones who treat their backlink profile like a reputation, not a vending machine.

Conclusion: Which Platform Should You Actually Use?

If you’re just starting out and want to test demand without commitment, Fiverr is the lowest-friction entry point — just price your gig realistically and don’t compete on the bottom rung. If you’ve got an established niche blog with steady traffic, Adsy or Whitepress offer more predictable, professional income without the marketplace noise. Niche-specific bloggers — particularly in finance, health, or B2B — will likely get more long-term value from PostJoint’s editorial approach, since reputation matters more in those spaces than fast cash. And once your blog has real history and traffic behind it, Authority Builders is worth the application hassle for the higher payouts.

There’s no single “best” answer here — it depends on your traffic, your niche, and how much editorial control you’re willing to trade for income. Start with one platform, learn how buyers in your niche actually behave, and expand from there.

FAQ

Can guest posting actually hurt my SEO? Yes, if you’re linking to or from low-quality, spammy sites, or if your content reads as obviously manipulative. Quality and relevance matter more than volume.

How much should I charge for a guest post on my blog? Pricing should reflect your domain authority, organic traffic, and niche demand — typically anywhere from $25 to $200+ depending on those factors. Check what comparable sites in your niche are charging on the platforms above before settling on a number.

Is paid guest posting against Google’s guidelines? Buying or selling links specifically to manipulate search rankings violates Google’s guidelines. Using proper nofollow/sponsored tags and disclosing paid content reduces that risk significantly.

Do I need a certain amount of traffic before I can monetize guest posts? Not technically, but most serious buyers and stricter platforms (like Authority Builders) expect at least some consistent organic traffic and publishing history before they’ll pay well or approve your application.

What’s the difference between guest posting and link insertion monetization? Guest posting means publishing a full new article (often with a backlink included), while link insertion means adding a backlink into your existing, already-ranking content. Both fall under backlink monetization, but link insertions often pay less since there’s no new content involved.


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