For beginners, the best guest posting services are simply those that publish on real, relevant blogs. A guest post is simply an article published on someone else's website that includes a link back to yours. Guest posting services do the hard parts for you — finding relevant sites, writing the article, and getting it published. Done well, it's one of the most natural ways to earn links; done badly, it's a fast way to waste money on sites nobody reads.

This is a beginner-friendly guide: what these services do, a ranked top 10 explained simply, and three rules to choose safely.

👋 New to this and not sure where to start? Book a free call and I'll point you the right way — even if that's doing it yourself for now.

What You're Actually Buying

When you pay for a guest post, you're paying for three things: someone to find a relevant site, someone to write a decent article, and the placement itself with your link inside. The golden rule before we start the list: a guest post on a small site that's genuinely about your topic is worth far more than one on a big, unrelated site.

The 10 Best Guest Posting Services, Explained Simply

1. Goldie Agency

My team. If it all feels overwhelming, we just handle it — finding the right sites, writing the post, and placing your link the safe way. No fixed price because every site differs; book a quick call for a custom quote.

2. FATJOE

About as beginner-proof as it gets — pick a package, fill a short form, they write and place it. An easy first step.

3. The HOTH

Similar to FATJOE with a clean dashboard so you can follow each stage. Friendly for people who like to see progress.

4. Authority Builders

A marketplace where you can see each site's stats and traffic before you buy — slightly more hands-on, but it teaches you to spot a good site.

5. Outreach Monks

Managed guest posting at gentler prices — a reasonable next step once you've got the basics.

6. Editorial.Link

Higher-end, quality-focused placements that read like genuine articles. Expect to pay more.

7. Globex Outreach

Guest posts focused on sites relevant to your topic — worth comparing on the sites offered.

8. Loganix

Guest posts and other done-for-you SEO bits with clear reporting.

9. Adsy

A budget-friendly self-serve marketplace — good for learning, but always check each site is genuinely relevant.

10. Stellar SEO

Custom outreach focused on relevant, quality guest placements.

How To Choose (Without Stress)

Three beginner rules. One: relevant beats big — favour a site about your topic over a huge unrelated one. Two: avoid anything promising dozens of guest posts for very little money; those land on farms. Three: start with one post, check the result, and only spend more once you're happy.

How To Spot A Bad Site

Before you accept any placement, glance at the site. Is it about a single clear topic, or a random mix of unrelated articles? Does it look like real people visit, with comments, shares, and a genuine brand — or is it an empty shell covered in outbound links? A quick look usually tells you whether it's a real blog or a link farm, and that one habit will save you most of the money beginners waste.

Common Questions

Is guest posting against Google's rules?

Guest posting on relevant, real sites is standard and low-risk. What Google punishes is large-scale guest posting purely for links on spammy sites — quality and relevance keep you safe.

How much should I pay?

As a general range, quality guest posts often cost around $100 to $500+ each. Start small.

Can I learn this myself?

Yes — my free Link Building Mastery book covers it, and the SEO Elite Circle is a friendly place to learn with others.

Your First Month With Guest Posting

If you're brand new, here's a gentle first month so it doesn't feel overwhelming. Week 1: don't buy anything yet. Pick a few blogs in your niche and practise telling a real site from a farm — does it cover one clear topic, look like real people read it, and publish useful articles? This trains your eye for free. Week 2: choose one beginner-friendly provider and order a single guest post, treating it purely as a learning exercise rather than a growth plan.

Week 3: when the post goes live, check it against three questions — is the site relevant, does it have real traffic, and does the article read naturally? If yes, lovely; if not, you've learned something valuable for the cost of one post. Week 4: decide your pace. On a tight budget, build a post or two a month; if you'd rather it was handled while you run your business, that's what an agency is for. The aim of month one isn't a pile of links — it's the confidence to spot a good site, which is the skill that saves beginners the most money.

Guest Posts vs Other Link Types

Beginners often wonder how guest posts compare to other ways of getting links, so here's the plain version. A guest post is content you write that gets published elsewhere with your link inside — you control the article and the link. A 'niche edit' (or link insertion) is when your link is added into an existing article on someone's site; quicker, but you don't control the surrounding content. A directory or profile link is easy to get but usually weak. And an earned link is when someone links to you naturally because your content is genuinely good — the best kind, and free, but slow.

For most beginners, guest posts are a sensible middle ground: more reliable than waiting to earn links, and higher quality than directories, as long as the site is real and relevant. Don't rely on any single type, though. A natural-looking profile has a mix — a few guest posts, the odd earned mention, some brand links — because that's what a genuinely growing site accumulates over time.

Related Guides

Keep learning with our guides on the best link building services, the best blogger outreach services, and the best place to buy backlinks.

In Short

A guest post is just a relevant article on another site that links to you. Start small, favour relevance, and check every site before you accept it. To skip the learning curve, book a call.