How important is anchor text for internal links How important is the anchor text for internal links, specifically with regards to the home page. I'm in the process of redesigning the home page on one of my sites. In current design I have simple list of links that link to various event pages. The anchor text is basically the name of the event. Simple. But the events have sub-events and what is actually shown is the sub-event, so there can be 2 or 3 three links with similar descriptions each pointing to their specific page for example: ++++++++++++++ list of top cheapest host http://Listfreetop.pw Top 200 best traffic exchange sites http://Listfreetop.pw/surf free link exchange sites list http://Listfreetop.pw/links list of top ptc sites list of top ptp sites Listfreetop.pw Listfreetop.pw +++++++++++++++ - Example event, sub-event-1 - Example event, sub-event-2 - Another event sub-event-1 From a user perspective there is a lot of repetition, but each anchor text correctly and simply describes the linked page. In my new design I'm trying to clean things up a bit, by adding a calender to show the events. The new layout would show a day and the name of the event and have a link to the with the anchor text showing only the sub-event-1. Note that the sub-events are always the same. Something like small, medium and large. Example: June 21 Example Event small medium large Another Event small June 22 Different Event small medium The end result in terms of anchor text is that all the links will have nearly the same text. Is anchor text important, critical? Do I need to worry about this, or is the surrounding text and the url (which is descriptive) sufficient? From a UI perspective the new layout will be far superior but I'm afraid that this will impact how Googlebot interprets and crawls my site. Each URL is unique? (YES) Should be no problem. Falls into the g known "redundancy" of /widget/red /widget/blue /widget/green /widget/cheap /widget/fabulous paradigm. Then again, what is the definition of "anchor text" and how does g view it? Forget for a moment the unspoken rules of Uncle G: when there is repetition - unless it is required to drive some point home - there is usually a waste of opportunity and potentially a cause of irritation. Also, where is the call to action, the explicit selling feature, that will (1) catch the attention, (2) generate the click impulse, and (3) ease the visitor onto the landing page? Much as with search query results it's the title à la anchor text and the description à la accompanying text that (1) grabs the eye and (2) drives the click. Minimalist can be a very good very successful style. But totally stripping so all that remains is skeleton is not usually conducive to initiating visitor engagement UNLESS there is sufficient meat elsewhere on the page that fleshes out the bare bones of the calendar links OR there is no need to so engage with the visitor à la Google's famously bare search input page. Note: a general observation and possibly not at all applicable to your visitor and business needs. Back to Uncle G: the repetition as shown is not so much a problem as, again, a missed opportunity. Given our example 'small', 'medium', 'large' is already in the URL path; are they important enough to be repeated so often? Or sufficiently important to the visitor? Without additional support? What site/niche named entities and associated search intent(s) could benefit by being included in anchor text? In associated text? Note: see Anchor Text Best Practices for Google, 2018 [searchenginejournal.com] written by Roger Montti (aka martinibuster) and others' opinions on anchor text beginning about half way down page. @Iamlost I'm not going the minimalist route. My intent is too clean things up and make the page look like I assume users would expect it to look like. The links in question were added to the page as an after thought after I realized that Google was not finding the content like I expected it would. The links helped, but they were added in haste and now the situation needs a clean up. All the information will be there clearly displayed, the big differences are, the repetitive text will be removed and only a tiny portion of text will remain as anchor text, the other text will be headings above the anchor. To be more specific: