A curated list of high-authority Web 2.0 submission sites for 2026, plus the exact white-hat workflow our Pune SEO team uses to turn them into backlinks that actually move rankings.
Web 2.0 submission sites are one of the oldest โ and still one of the safest โ ways to build backlinks. Instead of begging another website for a link, you create your own page on a high-authority platform like WordPress.com, Medium or Tumblr, publish genuinely useful content, and add a contextual link back to your site. Done well, it earns authority, speeds up indexing and diversifies your link profile. Done badly, it's just spam.
This guide explains what Web 2.0 sites are, why they still work in 2026, a step-by-step submission workflow, a curated high-DA Web 2.0 sites list, and the best practices our team at Webbloom Digital's SEO service in Pune follows on every campaign.
The term "Web 2.0" refers to the shift from static, read-only websites to interactive platforms built around user-generated content. A Web 2.0 submission site is any free platform that lets you publish a page, mini-blog or profile and include links inside your content.
A Web 2.0 property is a free sub-page you control on someone else's high-authority domain โ for example yourbrand.wordpress.com or a medium.com article. Because the parent domain already has trust with Google, a well-built page on it can pass a portion of that authority to your money site through a contextual backlink.
The best-known Web 2.0 platforms include WordPress.com, Blogger, Medium, Tumblr, Weebly, Wix, Substack, LiveJournal and Telegraph. Profile-and-content platforms such as Quora, Scribd, Behance and Flipboard also behave like Web 2.0 properties for link-building purposes.
Domain Authority (DA) and Page Authority (PA) are Moz metrics that predict how well a domain or page is likely to rank, scored from 1 to 100. A higher-DA parent platform generally means a stronger backlink โ which is why this list prioritises Web 2.0 sites with DA 80+. DA is a third-party estimate, not a Google metric, so treat it as a guide rather than gospel.
Yes โ when you use them the white-hat way. Publishing original, helpful content with a natural link is well within Google's guidelines. The risk comes from spun content, exact-match anchor stuffing, and building hundreds of identical properties overnight. Quality and pacing keep you safe.
Because you control the content and the platforms are already trusted, Web 2.0 links are one of the safest link types to build yourself. They're a sensible foundation before you pursue harder editorial links and digital PR.
High-DA platforms are crawled by Google constantly. A fresh link from one of them can help Google discover and index your new pages faster than waiting on your own site's crawl budget.
A useful Medium article or Scribd document doesn't just pass link equity โ real people read it and click through. Those brand mentions and visits are exactly the kind of signals that also feed AI search engines like ChatGPT and Perplexity.
Unlike a guest post you have to pitch, a Web 2.0 property is yours to edit. You choose the topic, the surrounding context and the anchor text โ which lets you keep everything natural.
Keep your anchor text varied. Mix branded anchors ("Webbloom Digital"), naked URLs (webbloomdigital.com), and natural phrases ("digital marketing agency in Pune"). Avoid using the same exact-match keyword on every property โ that's the fastest way to create a footprint.
Open with a helpful tip or mini how-to relevant to your niche โ expand it into 3โ4 short paragraphs โ drop one contextual link where it adds value โ close with a short author bio. Reuse the structure, never the exact text.
Below is a curated list of high-authority Web 2.0 and profile-submission platforms, grouped by approximate Domain Authority. Create a real, complete property on each โ start at the top and work down.
| # | Web 2.0 Site | Approx. DA | Submission Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | WordPress.com | 94 | Visit โ |
| 2 | Blogger | 100 | Visit โ |
| 3 | Google Sites | 100 | Visit โ |
| 4 | Tumblr | 99 | Visit โ |
| 5 | Medium | 96 | Visit โ |
| 6 | SlideShare | 95 | Visit โ |
| 7 | Scribd | 95 | Visit โ |
| 8 | Goodreads | 94 | Visit โ |
| 9 | Wix | 93 | Visit โ |
| 10 | Weebly | 93 | Visit โ |
| 11 | Quora | 93 | Visit โ |
| 12 | Disqus | 93 | Visit โ |
| 13 | Trello | 93 | Visit โ |
| 14 | Behance | 92 | Visit โ |
| 15 | Issuu | 92 | Visit โ |
| 16 | 92 | Visit โ | |
| 17 | Wattpad | 92 | Visit โ |
| 18 | Pastebin | 92 | Visit โ |
| 19 | Gravatar | 92 | Visit โ |
| 20 | Ghost | 92 | Visit โ |
| 21 | LiveJournal | 92 | Visit โ |
| 22 | Substack | 91 | Visit โ |
| 23 | Telegraph | 91 | Visit โ |
| 24 | Strikingly | 90 | Visit โ |
| 25 | Jimdo | 90 | Visit โ |
| 26 | Evernote | 90 | Visit โ |
| 27 | About.me | 89 | Visit โ |
| 28 | Webnode | 88 | Visit โ |
| 29 | Diigo | 88 | Visit โ |
| 30 | Webs.com | 88 | Visit โ |
| 31 | Edublogs | 88 | Visit โ |
| 32 | HubPages | 86 | Visit โ |
| 33 | Site123 | 86 | Visit โ |
| 34 | Plurk | 86 | Visit โ |
| 35 | Yola | 84 | Visit โ |
| 36 | Bravenet | 84 | Visit โ |
| 37 | Wakelet | 82 | Visit โ |
| 38 | Minds | 80 | Visit โ |
| 39 | Penzu | 80 | Visit โ |
| 40 | Storeboard | 70 | Visit โ |
DA values are approximate Moz-style estimates and change over time. Use this as a priority guide, not an exact ranking.
Five fully-built, genuinely useful properties beat fifty thin ones every time. Each page should be something you'd be happy for a customer to read.
Build steadily โ a handful of properties per week โ so your link velocity looks organic. Sudden spikes of hundreds of links look manipulative.
Vary your anchor text and point links at different inner pages (services, blog posts, location pages) โ not only your homepage.
Don't reuse the same username, bio, content or interlinking pattern across every property. Repeating footprints is what gets networks devalued.
Web 2.0 submissions are a foundation layer, not the whole strategy. Pair them with strong on-page SEO, local SEO and Google Business Profile, quality content marketing, and editorial links to build a profile that ranks and lasts. If you'd rather have a team handle the whole thing, that's exactly what we do at Webbloom Digital for businesses across Pune, PCMC and Maharashtra.
Web 2.0 submission sites are free user-generated platforms โ like WordPress.com, Medium, Tumblr and Blogger โ where you create a page, mini-blog or profile and add a contextual link back to your website. They help build backlinks, brand signals and faster indexing.
Yes, when done with quality and restraint. Unique, useful content on high-DA Web 2.0 properties still passes authority, speeds up indexing and diversifies your link profile. Spun or duplicate content across dozens of properties no longer works and can be risky.
It varies by platform. Some pass dofollow links in body content, others use nofollow. A natural profile contains both, so a healthy mix of dofollow and nofollow Web 2.0 links is normal and safe.
Pace yourself. Building 3โ5 high-quality, fully-completed properties per week with unique content is far safer and more effective than mass-posting dozens of thin pages in a single day.
Indirectly, yes. Web 2.0 properties build authority and brand mentions that support overall SEO. For local ranking in Pune, pair them with Google Business Profile, local citations and location-specific content.
Webbloom Digital builds safe, high-DA backlinks and full off-page SEO campaigns for businesses in Pune, PCMC & Maharashtra. Book a free consultation today.