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Silo Architecture Builder

Map out website page hierarchies and create optimized internal linking recommendations with our free website Silo Architecture Builder. Paste your list of URLs, choose a linking pattern (Hub & Spoke, Ring, Chain, or Mesh), and automatically categorize content into structured topic silos. Select any page to reveal specific outbound and inbound links and descriptive anchor text suggestions. Export linking blueprints as CSV or markdown. No signup required.

Silo Planner Workspace

Enter your list of website URLs, choose a siloing linking pattern, and click Build to generate visual diagrams and outbound/inbound internal linking tasks.

Paste absolute or relative URLs. Shorter directories are auto-selected as Silo Hubs.

If empty, URLs will be auto-categorized by folder directories.

No Silo Structure Generated Yet

Paste a list of website URLs and click Build Silo Map to start.

Why Use Our Silo Architecture Builder?

Structured SEO Mapping

Map your website pages into clear thematic directories. Establish a logical layout of parent category hubs and child articles to demonstrate clean topical structure to search engines.

Visual Silo Trees

View your content siloing structures visually. Interactive HTML blocks display how your silos branch down and clarify page hierarchies at a glance, making audit reports easy to follow.

Multiple Linking Patterns

Support standard SEO architectures like Hub-and-Spoke, Ring (circular loop), Linear Chains, and Full-Mesh. Swap patterns instantly to find the best link flow for your site.

100% Private & Client-Side

Your URL mappings, page titles, and category structures are processed entirely inside your browser. No lists are saved or uploaded to external servers, protecting your pre-launch strategies.

Common Use Cases for Silo Architecture Builder

Website Replatforming

Map out internal redirect maps and ensure clean category structures are preserved during site migrations, prevents page rank drops.

Keyword Cluster Mapping

Turn keyword research groups directly into content silo plans. Map related semantic clusters into cohesive horizontal internal linking chains.

Blog Content Organization

Clean up sprawling blog indexes. Audit posts and establish strict parent category pages that group posts into isolated topical categories.

Ecommerce Category Silos

Map department landing pages down to product list pages and detailed product items, optimizing link juice distribution.

Client Audit Reports

Generate clear internal linking proposals for client websites. Copy recommendations as markdown or export plans as ready-to-use CSV logs.

New Site Blueprints

Map website directory structures before writing single lines of code. Model structural link maps for developers and copywriters.

Understanding Website Silo Architecture

What is website Silo Architecture?

Silo Architecture is an advanced SEO technique that structures a website\'s content around key topics or parent categories. Rather than grouping all blog posts or services in a flat directory, pages are organized into isolated topical "silos." For example, a sports site might separate content into "Basketball" and "Tennis" silos. By implementing strict vertical internal linking (linking child pages to their category hub and vice versa) and restricting cross-silo linking, you establish high topical authority and make it easier for search engine crawlers to understand the semantic relationships between pages.

Silo Internal Linking Patterns

  • Hub and Spoke: The category page (hub) links to all child pages, and each child links back to the hub. There are no horizontal links between child pages. Great for simple setups.
  • Ring (Circular): The hub links to all children, children link back to the hub, and children also link to each other in a closed circle (Child 1 → Child 2 → Child 3 → Child 1). This distributes maximum page authority (PageRank) across all child nodes.
  • Chain (Linear): Category hub links to Child 1, which links to Child 2, and so on. Children link back up to the Hub. Best for step-by-step tutorials or multi-part guide content.
  • Full Mesh: Every page in the silo links to every other page in the same silo. Best used for small, highly focused silos of 3-5 pages.

How to Use the Silo Architecture Builder

  1. 1. Input URL List: Paste a list of your website URLs (one per line). You can use relative paths (e.g. /seo/tips) or absolute paths.
  2. 2. Select Configuration: Define your website\'s base domain, pick a linking pattern, and optionally define explicit category names (e.g. seo, design, dev) if you want to override automatic folder-level siloing.
  3. 3. Audit Mappings & Recommendations: Inspect the visual silo tree to see which pages are categorized together and which act as category hubs. Select any page in the list to reveal detailed outbound/inbound linking task suggestions.

SEO Siloing Best Practices

Always establish a primary category landing page (Silo Hub) that acts as the authority focal point. Maintain strict discipline regarding cross-silo linking: do not link child pages in Silo A to child pages in Silo B. If you must connect topics, link from the child page in Silo A to the category hub page in Silo B instead. Make sure to use descriptive, keyword-focused anchor texts rather than generic terms like "click here" or "read more."

Frequently Asked Questions About website Silo Architecture

Silo Architecture is an SEO content grouping strategy. It structures your website's directories and internal links around specific themes or parent categories. Organizing related pages into self-contained "silos" establishes clear topical authority for search engines and boosts keywords in rankings.

A hard silo uses the physical directory structure of the URLs to isolate categories (e.g., /category-a/page-1). A soft silo uses internal linking structures (anchor texts, cross-links) to group pages regardless of their actual URL paths (e.g. grouping flat URLs). This builder supports mapping both patterns.

Ideally, a silo should have at least 1 parent category page (hub) and 3 to 5 supporting child articles (spokes). Extremely large silos (20+ pages) may dilute page authority, so it is often better to split them into sub-silos once they expand.

For optimal SEO results, a page should belong to only one primary silo. Cross-categorization can dilute topical focus and confuse search bots. If a page relates to another silo, link to the other silo's parent category hub rather than linking child-to-child.

Siloing creates clear, logical crawl paths. Search spiders can index related pages faster and understand which hub pages are the main authorative targets, which helps category landing pages rank higher for competitive search terms.

The "Hub and Spoke" pattern is the easiest to set up and audit. However, the "Ring" (circular child-to-child links) is highly recommended for competitive topics, as it passes page rank continuously around the child spokes, keeping all articles indexed.

Absolutely. All parsing, categorization, and visual link mapping are executed client-side in your web browser. No data or URL logs are sent to external servers, protecting pre-launch structural plans.