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LinkWorth

Min. Withdraw

$25

Payout Frequency

Monthly

Payment Methods

PayPal, Wire transfer, Direct deposit

Visit LinkWorth

Go to site

Ratings

Support

ℹ️
2.0

Technology

ℹ️
2.0

Security

ℹ️
3.0

Effectiveness

ℹ️
2.0

Pros

  • 11 ad products in one account
  • Publishers set their own prices and choose placements
  • Affiliate: $50 per referral + 5% lifetime recurring on all spending/earning

Cons

  • Selling paid links violates Google guidelines
  • Platform shows minimal development

Review

LinkWorth, based in Dallas, Texas, and operating since the early 2000s, was once considered one of the web's larger and more innovative text link advertising marketplaces.

At its peak, it offered genuine utility: a unified platform covering 11 different ad product types — text link ads, paid blog reviews, in-text links, rotating ads, hosted content pages, banner ads, and more — with publishers setting their own prices and keeping 50% of revenue. The affiliate program, which pays $50 per referred account plus 5% lifetime recurring commissions on all activity, remains structurally one of the more generous in the link marketplace niche.

In practice, however, LinkWorth presents serious concerns in 2026. The most significant is a documented pattern of non-payment to publishers — multiple forum reports describe unpaid invoices, unresponsive support, and disputes escalated to PayPal without resolution.

This is not an isolated complaint; it appears consistently across AdsWiki, WebmasterWorld threads, and other community forums. For any publisher evaluating the platform, the risk of non-payment is real and should weigh heavily.

Beyond payment reliability, the platform suffers from the same fundamental issue as Backlinks.com: buying and selling links for SEO purposes violates Google's policies, and both advertisers and publishers face potential ranking penalties or manual actions.

The interface is visibly dated, the social media presence is essentially nonexistent beyond LinkedIn, and there is no evidence of meaningful product development in recent years.

Best for: historically relevant as one of the early link marketplace pioneers; the affiliate program structure has some merit on paper.

Not ideal for: publishers who need reliable payouts, advertisers seeking sustainable SEO results, or anyone concerned about Google penalties.