A 45-bed treatment center came to us with a common problem: they had 80+ pages of quality content but poor organic performance. Traffic was flat. Key pages weren’t ranking.

After auditing their site, we found the issue: their pages were islands. No strategic internal linking. No topic clusters. No authority flow.

Six months after implementing a comprehensive internal linking strategy—without creating new content—their organic traffic doubled. Here’s exactly what we did.

Why Internal Linking Matters

Internal links do three things for SEO:

1. Distribute page authority When a page earns backlinks, that authority is “stuck” on that page unless internal links distribute it to other pages. Without internal links, your homepage might have strong authority while your program pages starve.
2. Help Google understand site structure Internal links tell Google which pages are important, how pages relate to each other, and what topics your site covers. Poor internal linking leaves Google confused about your site architecture.
3. Guide users toward conversion Strategic internal links move visitors from informational content to service pages to conversion points. Without this pathway, users dead-end on blog posts and leave.

The Audit: What We Found

When we audited this facility’s website, we found:

Homepage:

  • 47 backlinks from external sites
  • Only 3 internal links to program pages
  • 0 internal links to insurance pages
  • Authority concentrated and stuck

Program pages:

  • Average 1-2 internal links each
  • No links between related programs
  • No links from blog content
  • No links to insurance pages

Blog posts (45 total):

  • 80% had zero internal links
  • 15% had 1 link (usually to homepage)
  • 5% had 2+ links (random placement)
  • No strategic linking to conversion pages

Insurance pages:

  • Average 0.5 internal links each
  • Not linked from program pages
  • Not linked from blog content
  • Essentially orphaned

Location pages:

  • Only linked from footer navigation
  • No contextual internal links
  • No supporting content linking to them

The Internal Linking Framework

We implemented a four-tier linking structure:

Tier 1: Hub and Spoke Model

Central hubs: Main program pages (residential, IOP, detox, etc.)
Spokes: Supporting content that links to and from each hub
Implementation:

  • Each program page (hub) receives links from 5-10 supporting articles (spokes)
  • Each hub links out to its spokes
  • Spokes link to each other where relevant
  • All hubs link to conversion pages (contact, VOB)

Example structure: “` Residential Treatment Hub ├── “What to Expect in Residential Treatment” (spoke) ├── “How Long is Residential Rehab” (spoke) ├── “Residential vs. PHP Treatment” (spoke) ├── “Cost of Residential Treatment” (spoke) └── “Is Residential Right for You” (spoke)

All spokes link to:

  • Residential Treatment Hub
  • Each other (where relevant)
  • Insurance pages
  • Contact/Admissions page

“`

Tier 2: Topic Clusters

Related content grouped and interlinked:

Cluster: Dual Diagnosis

  • Main dual diagnosis program page (pillar)
  • Depression and addiction article
  • Anxiety and addiction article
  • PTSD and addiction article
  • Bipolar and addiction article
  • Each links to every other page in cluster

Cluster: Insurance

  • Main insurance page (pillar)
  • Individual insurance provider pages
  • “How to verify coverage” article
  • “Out-of-network options” article
  • Each links to every other page in cluster

Tier 3: Strategic Cross-Linking

Pages that should link to each other based on user journey:

Example cross-links:

  • Every program page → relevant insurance pages
  • Insurance pages → all programs covered
  • “What to expect” articles → admission process page
  • Location pages → all programs available
  • Blog posts about substances → relevant treatment programs
  • Cost articles → insurance and VOB pages

Tier 4: Conversion Pathways

Every page should be within 2 clicks of conversion:

Pattern:

  • Informational blog → Related program page → Contact/VOB
  • Location page → Program page → Insurance verification
  • Insurance page → VOB form (embedded)

The Implementation Process

Phase 1: Audit and Map (Week 1)

Step 1: Export all pages from the site
Step 2: Categorize each page (program, blog, insurance, location, etc.)
Step 3: Map current internal links using Screaming Frog or similar
Step 4: Identify orphan pages (pages with 0-1 internal links)
Step 5: Identify high-authority pages (use Ahrefs or Moz)

Phase 2: Strategy Design (Week 2)

Step 1: Define hub pages for each topic area
Step 2: Assign supporting pages to each hub
Step 3: Map conversion pathways from each content type
Step 4: Identify cross-linking opportunities
Step 5: Create linking matrix (spreadsheet showing which pages link where)

Phase 3: Implementation (Weeks 3-6)

Prioritization order:

  1. Links from high-authority pages (distribute authority first)
  2. Links to high-value conversion pages (program pages, insurance pages)
  3. Topic cluster internal links
  4. Blog-to-service page links
  5. General supporting links

Per-page process:

  1. Review page content
  2. Identify 3-5 natural linking opportunities in existing text
  3. Select appropriate anchor text (varied, natural)
  4. Add links with descriptive anchor text
  5. Verify links work correctly
  6. Track changes in spreadsheet

Phase 4: Ongoing Maintenance

New content process:

  • Every new blog post must include 3-5 internal links
  • Internal linking added to content creation checklist
  • Monthly audit of new orphan pages
  • Quarterly full site link audit

Anchor Text Strategy

Anchor text (the clickable text of a link) matters. Here’s our approach:

Vary anchor text: Don’t use identical anchor text for all links to the same page
Use natural language: Links should read naturally in content
Include keywords sometimes: But not always—variation is key
Avoid generic anchors: “Click here” and “learn more” waste linking power
Examples for a residential treatment page:

  • “our residential treatment program” ✓
  • “residential rehab” ✓
  • “30-day inpatient treatment” ✓
  • “learn more about residential options” ✓
  • “click here” ✗
  • “residential treatment residential treatment program” ✗ (over-optimized)

Results After 6 Months

Organic traffic:

  • Month 0: 4,200 monthly organic sessions
  • Month 6: 9,100 monthly organic sessions
  • Increase: 117%

Keyword rankings:

  • Page 1 keywords: 12 → 34 (183% increase)
  • Page 2 keywords: 28 → 67 (139% increase)

Page-level improvements:

  • Residential treatment page: Position 14 → Position 4
  • IOP page: Position 22 → Position 7
  • Insurance pages: Average improvement of 11 positions

Conversion metrics:

  • Organic leads: 18/month → 42/month (133% increase)
  • Pages per session: 1.8 → 3.2 (visitors exploring more)
  • Bounce rate: 68% → 52% (users engaging more)

Common Internal Linking Mistakes

Mistake #1: Over-linking Adding 20 links to a 500-word article looks spammy and dilutes value. Aim for 3-5 links per 1,000 words.
Mistake #2: Same anchor text everywhere Using “drug rehab” as anchor text for every link to your rehab page triggers over-optimization signals.
Mistake #3: Only linking from navigation Footer and sidebar links count but carry less weight than contextual links within content.
Mistake #4: Ignoring orphan pages Pages with no internal links may not get indexed at all.
Mistake #5: Linking to low-value pages Every internal link passes some authority. Don’t waste links on pages that don’t matter.
Mistake #6: Broken internal links Links to 404 pages waste authority and hurt user experience.

The Internal Linking Audit Template

Use this to audit your own site:

“` Page: [URL] Category: [Program/Blog/Insurance/Location/Other] Current internal links pointing to this page: [Number] Current internal links from this page: [Number]

Analysis:

  • Is this page orphaned (0-1 inbound links)? [Y/N]
  • Does this page link to conversion pages? [Y/N]
  • Is this page part of a topic cluster? [Y/N]
  • Does this page link to related content? [Y/N]

Action items:

  • Add links FROM these pages: [List]
  • Add links TO these pages: [List]
  • Anchor text variations to use: [List]

Completed: [Date] “`

Implementation Checklist

  • [ ] Export all site pages
  • [ ] Identify current internal link structure
  • [ ] Find orphan pages
  • [ ] Define hub pages and clusters
  • [ ] Create linking matrix
  • [ ] Prioritize implementation order
  • [ ] Add links to high-authority pages first
  • [ ] Complete hub-and-spoke structures
  • [ ] Add cross-links between related content
  • [ ] Ensure conversion pathways exist
  • [ ] Fix broken internal links
  • [ ] Update content creation checklist
  • [ ] Schedule quarterly audits

Next Steps

Internal linking is one of the highest-ROI SEO activities you can do. It requires no new content, no external link building, and no technical changes—just strategic organization of what you already have.

Audit your internal linking: Use our free SEO audit prompt to analyze your site structure and identify linking opportunities. Download our free Rehab SEO Ebook for detailed templates and implementation guides.

If you want a professional internal linking audit and strategy, we offer a free SEO audit at RehabGrowth. We’ll map your current link structure and provide a prioritized implementation plan.