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Monday, January 19, 2026

Our Top 5 Blog Posts of 2025 (And What Made Them Work)

This post was originally published on this site.

We’re sharing the content that worked hardest for us in 2025, to give you an idea of what might work for you in 2026.

And, naturally, we wanted to remind you of some of our best blogs 😉

Below, we’ve used Ahrefs Web Analytics to find our most-viewed articles published in 2025.

We were inspired by Amanda Natividad’s SparkToro post. Great stuff from Amanda as usual—check it out for more content ideas!

Our top 5 blogs in 2025 

In 2025, three of our five most-visited articles were research studies, created using data from Ahrefs.

The remaining two included an SEO blog and an article generated almost entirely by AI.

Sidenote.

We have filtered out blogs published pre-2025, or those updated in 2025.

Let’s get into it…

1. AI Overviews Reduce Clicks by 34.5%

AI Overviews Reduce Clicks by 34.5% was our most-viewed article overall, driving ~96,000 visits since it was published back in April, according to Ahrefs Web Analytics.

Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 81.2K unique visitors, 74.4% bounce rate, and traffic spike in April for an 'AI Overviews Reduce Clicks' blog post.Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 81.2K unique visitors, 74.4% bounce rate, and traffic spike in April for an 'AI Overviews Reduce Clicks' blog post.

This research tapped into our first-party data to tackle the question every SEO has been asking this year: how much traffic are AI Overviews actually stealing?

We analyzed 300,000 keywords and found that when an AI Overview appears, the top-ranking page sees 34.5% fewer clicks compared to similar queries without one.

By comparing clickthrough rates before and after Google’s AI Overview rollout, we measured the real impact: position #1 for informational keywords dropped from a 0.056 CTR to just 0.031 after AI Overviews appeared.

The data confirmed what many of us suspected—AI Overviews are significantly reducing traffic to top-ranking pages, even when those pages still hold the #1 spot.

2. An Analysis of AI Overview Brand Visibility Factors 

An Analysis of AI Overview Brand Visibility Factors (75K Brands Studied) came in at number two. I wrote this piece of research to confirm, once and for all, whether PR and off-site brand mentions were the most important factor when it came to AI visibility.

Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 28.7K unique visitors, 62.4% bounce rate, and 21m 3s visit duration for blog post 'An Analysis of AI Overview Brand Visibility Factors' over one year.Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 28.7K unique visitors, 62.4% bounce rate, and 21m 3s visit duration for blog post 'An Analysis of AI Overview Brand Visibility Factors' over one year.

It was a theory I kept hearing everywhere at the time, but I (like others, it turns out) wanted to see the cold hard data. Together with Ahrefs’ Data Scientist, Xibeijia, I analyzed 75,000 brands to assess how eleven different branded search factors correlated with AI Overview visibility—we’ve since repeated this study for ChatGPT and AI Mode.

Our biggest finding? Branded web mentions do correlate strongly (0.664) with AI Overview presence—more so than any other factor, including backlinks or domain rating.

We also found that if your brand sits in the bottom 50% of web mentions, you’re essentially invisible to AI systems.

3. AI Content Creation: My Process for High-Quality, SEO-Friendly Articles 

AI Content Creation: My Process for High-Quality, SEO-Friendly Articles was our third most-viewed blog, racking up ~30K views.

Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 25.1K unique visitors for AI content creation blog post, with 77% bounce rate and spike in early JanuaryAhrefs analytics dashboard showing 25.1K unique visitors for AI content creation blog post, with 77% bounce rate and spike in early January

My teammate Despina Gavoyannis created this practical SOP (standard operating procedure) for marketers wanting to integrate AI into their content workflows.

This guide walks through her exact process for using AI as a tool—not a replacement—for creating content that ranks.

The post covers everything from finding rankable keywords and identifying search intent, to adding original info that AI can’t generate on its own.

Despina’s SOPs have performed especially well via Google Discover traffic…

Screenshot of Google Discover report in Google Search Console showing top pages with clicks and impressions. First page (ahrefs.com/blog/ai-content-creation/) has 15,985 clicks and 570,533 impressions.Screenshot of Google Discover report in Google Search Console showing top pages with clicks and impressions. First page (ahrefs.com/blog/ai-content-creation/) has 15,985 clicks and 570,533 impressions.

Google Discover users seem to engage deeply with practical, step-by-step SOPs that help them complete real tasks.

4. What Is llms.txt, and Should You Care About It? 

What Is llms.txt, and Should You Care About It?: Ryan wrote this explainer in just a couple of hours using ChatGPT. Now it’s our fourth most-viewed blog of 2025. 

Not bad 😉

Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 23.7K unique visitors over one year for a blog post about LLMS-TXT, with a traffic spike in April.Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing 23.7K unique visitors over one year for a blog post about LLMS-TXT, with a traffic spike in April.

The post breaks down llms.txt, a proposed standard designed to help large language models understand and access structured content from websites.

While some developers are experimenting with it, no major LLM provider currently supports it as part of their crawler protocol.

Ryan’s take: It’s a solution in search of a problem.

Search engines already crawl and understand content using existing infrastructure like robots.txt and sitemap.xml—LLMs use much of the same setup.

In 2025, Ryan built a seven-part AI content process and has since created 6+ wholesale AI blogs, which, together, have driven ~63,000 views to date.

You can watch how he does it on the Ahrefs Podcast below.

It just goes to show that AI generated content really can perform well. Use Ryan’s process to tackle trending and emerging topics before your competitors do.

5. Google Says “Links Matter Less” 

Google Says “Links Matter Less”—We Looked at 1,000,000 SERPs to See if It’s True: Google has been telling SEOs that links are less important than they used to be, and many in the industry have accepted this as fact.

But is it actually true?

Patrick Stox, Ahrefs’ Technical SEO expert, decided to settle the debate with data.

Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing blog post performance metrics for 'Google Says “Links Matter Less' study: 22.9K unique visitors, 78.4% bounce rate, and 16m 4s visit duration with traffic spike in January.Ahrefs analytics dashboard showing blog post performance metrics for 'Google Says “Links Matter Less' study: 22.9K unique visitors, 78.4% bounce rate, and 16m 4s visit duration with traffic spike in January.

He analyzed the top 1 million keywords by search volume, calculating Spearman correlations between SERP rankings and 20 different SEO metrics including domain rating, backlinks, referring domains, and internal links.

And, guess what? Links still matter—a lot.

While the correlation dropped slightly since a similar 2019 study (from 0.27 to 0.21 for total backlinks), links remained one of the strongest ranking signals, especially for high-volume, competitive queries.

The research also showed that links matter even more for informational content, local queries, and branded searches.

So while Google may be hedging on the importance of links publicly, the data tells a different story.

Our top 5 articles across every other traffic source 

Similarly to the SparkToro team, most of our top content in 2025 was research-based.

In fact, 56% of our most-viewed posts (across every channel) were research blogs.

Ahrefs' most viewed blogs of 2025 by content typesAhrefs' most viewed blogs of 2025 by content types

Our top 5 articles also tended to differ slightly from source to source.

Here are our top performers across organic search, AI search, direct, and social media.

Top blogs by search traffic

Top blogs by AI traffic

Top blogs by direct traffic

Top blogs by social traffic

Final thoughts

Here’s what we learned from our top blogs of 2025…

  • Test claims people are skeptical about: When official narratives don’t match what people see IRL, data-driven research will get you attention. That’s why Patrick’s research was so widely viewed—it provided hard data that challenged Google’s narrative.
  • Pick debates people care about: The best research answers questions your audience is actively debating, not ones you think they should care about.
  • Get in early on trending topics: Many of these posts worked because they jumped on trending topics early. Some didn’t even have search demand when we started writing about them—we just kept our ear to the ground on social media and in communities, and wrote about the topics driving discussion. Then, over time, those topics naturally gained search volume. That’s why 4 of our top 5 articles were also our most-viewed articles in search.
  • Don’t be afraid of AI-assisted content: One of our top posts was whipped up in an afternoon with ChatGPT, and still pulled in huge amounts of traffic. For timely topics or straightforward explainers, AI can get you 80% of the way there—just add your edits, pepper in some original examples, and ship it.
  • Give people SOPs they can steal: Not everything needs to be a data study. Step-by-step processes people can actually follow and adapt for their own work consistently perform well.
  • Use data nobody else has access to: Three of our top five posts used Ahrefs’ first-party data to answer questions no one else could. If you have proprietary data or access to information that other people don’t—use it. Whether that’s customer surveys, internal sales metrics, support ticket trends, user behavior analytics, financial data, or even aggregated insights from client work—unique data gives you a competitive moat that’s impossible to replicate.

When it comes to AI, the only certainty is uncertainty. What worked in 2025 might not work in 2026. But that’s exactly why we’ll keep sharing what we learn!

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