Loganix Review (2025)
What is Loganix.com? Loganix.com is a guest-post and link-building marketplace with over 5K listings on
What is Loganix.com?
Loganix.com is a guest-post and link-building marketplace with over 5K listings on its platform.
Loganix also provides other SEO services, including – link audit, SEO audit, local SEO, PPC, and copywriting services.

This review aims to check if Loganix is legit.
I tested the platform, used it, checked the publisher site metrics, and even contacted their support team with queries to give you an honest review about this platform. I have also tested other marketplaces and ranked the top link-building marketplaces here.
Our review
Visibility (traffic & founder) – 20%
7.5
Publisher sites’ transparency – 50%
4
Support quality – 30%
2
PROS
+ Positive reviews on user platforms
+ Decent filters
CONS
– A good number of sites with declining traffic
– Top country traffic doesn’t really work
– Publisher site metrics could be improved
Overall Score
4
Ranked #17 of 18
Key facts about Loganix
# of listings: 5K
Headquarters: USA, Washington, Seattle
Key people: CEO Aaron Haynes, COO Adam Steele
Commission: Link price includes the platform commission
Publisher metrics:
- Organic traffic: Yes
- General traffic: No
- By country: Yes* (only shows the top country)
- Traffic trends: No
Copywriting: available from the platform, price varies and is inclusive in the link placement starting from $190
Interface
Loganix provides the basic required info about its publisher sites – including domain authority metrics, estimated traffic, keywords, top traffic location, estimated turnaround time for a link, and a few more metrics.

However, the platform could improve by adding key features like historical traffic trend and geo-distribution.
Buying backlinks
Next, I tested If I am going to purchase a guest post, I would have a specific requirements and criteria in place to choose the website. As a user, I want to promote my Content Audit Tool on a truly authoritative website.
So here are my criteria in choosing the links:
- The publisher site must receive more than 1,000 monthly organic traffic. I want a Google-recognized site.
- The traffic is stable or growing. Must not be in a decline.
- Majority of the traffic should come from the US. My site and business caters to the US market, so I expect the same.
- The site should be relevant to my industry. Or in the same category. A cooking website isn’t the best place to promote an SEO SaaS tool.
- I want a Semrush Authority Score (AS) higher than my website’s, which is 24 as of today. Moz DA can be manipulated. Ahrefs DR can be manipulated. These legacy metrics have fallen prey to the “DR hackers.”
- I prefer the content publisher or platform copywriter to create content following their guidelines, using my input as the foundation.
- Lastly, I want to spend $200 or less on my backlink. Price matters.
With these criteria in mind, I set out to filter the sites.
The filters are decent. I was able to filter for traffic (1k+), price (<$200), traffic location (US), and site categories.

But, there is no filter for Semrush AS. Plus, I can’t see the historical traffic trend. I have to manually check these sites data on other SEO platforms like Semrush to check their quality.
Data accuracy
Next, I picked a site to check its metrics on Semrush. FYI, the site has an Ahrefs DR of 63 and a Moz DA of 56. The traffic shown is 10k+.

But it has a Semrush AS of 30 (half of its Ahrefs DR). But more importantly, the traffic is nose-diving. I am not interested in a site with declining traffic, but it shows from the limited filters I could use.

Another red flag is the traffic by country filter. I have started to realize no marketplace has got this right. Even if you apply the US traffic filter for sites, you will still get sites with the majority of their traffic coming from non-US sites. Here is an example:

Customer support speed and quality
To check the company’s support quality, we submitted an anonymous support request asking about how to use filters.
We didn’t receive any response from the Loagnix team.
Public reviews responsiveness
Loganix has favorable reviews on Trustpilot.
But some of the 5* reviews look a bit sus! I am not too sure, so I can’t comment on them.
The few 1* reviews the site has are addressed suitably well by their support team.
Founders accessibility
We love talking to founders about their products and requested a short interview from all the rating participants. Unfortunately, Loganix declined our request. So, we couldn’t gather any additional insights from its founders.
Loganix alternatives
We have listed and ranked Loganix alternatives on our worldwide guest-post marketplace rankings list. You can check them out.
Also, check out fatgrid.com if you’re interested in seeing Loganix’s inventory alongside price comparisons from major marketplaces.
Bottomline
We consider Loganix an okayish guest-posting marketplace. The marketplace has a clean interface, good filtering options, and positive reviews on user platforms like Trustpilot. However, limited metrics provided about listed sites, with a good number of sites showing declining traffic, leave room for a lot of improvement.
Note: This article may contain affiliate links. Please read our full disclaimer.
Have something to say? Join the discussion on LinkedIn or subscribe to stay tuned:
Max Roslyakov
Founder, Xamsor