Glossary

Definition

Topical Authority

The degree to which a website is recognised by search engines as a trusted, comprehensive source on a specific subject area.

Topical authority is the concept that search engines — and increasingly, AI models — prefer to surface content from websites that demonstrate deep, comprehensive coverage of a subject, rather than sites that publish on many unrelated topics. It is about being a recognised expert on a subject domain, not just an individual keyword.

How Google Assesses Topical Authority

Google uses a combination of signals to evaluate topical authority:

  • Content breadth and depth — does the site cover all major subtopics within a niche?
  • Internal linking structure — are related articles connected in a logical semantic web?
  • Backlink profile — do other authoritative sites in the niche link to you?
  • E-E-A-T signals — do authors have demonstrable expertise in the subject?
  • User engagement — do users find the content satisfying?

Building Topical Authority

The most effective approach is to build content clusters: a comprehensive pillar page on a broad topic, supported by multiple detailed subtopic articles, all interlinked. Cover the subject so thoroughly that there’s no reason for a user to go elsewhere.

Why It Matters More Now

With AI Overviews, Perplexity, and LLM-based search, topical authority has become even more important. These systems are trained on or retrieve from the most authoritative sources. A site with shallow coverage across many topics is less likely to be cited than a specialist site with deep, well-organised content on fewer subjects.

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