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Top Pages Finder

See the top organic pages of any domain — the handful of URLs that carry most of its search traffic — for up to 1,000 domains at a time.

Free · no signup · real data — provided by Keywords Everywhere, embedded live below.

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What the Top Pages Finder does

Almost every site follows the same distribution: a small fraction of pages earns the large majority of organic traffic. This tool exposes that 80/20 for any domain — the top-ranking pages, what they rank for, and how much traffic they pull — with bulk mode up to 1,000 domains and CSV or Excel export.

Competitor top-page lists are the cheapest content strategy available: they show which formats (calculators, "best X" roundups, data studies, glossaries) actually earn traffic in your niche, proven at someone else’s expense. Run it on your own domain too — knowing your own top pages tells you where internal links, updates, and monetization effort compound fastest. Then check what those pages rank for with the Organic Ranking Checker.

How to use it

  1. Enter a competitor’s domain — or your own.
  2. Review the top pages by estimated organic traffic.
  3. Note the content formats that recur — those formats are proven for your niche.
  4. Export via CSV, then build better versions of the top performers you can realistically beat.

Top Pages Finder FAQ

What can I learn from a competitor’s top pages?

Which topics and formats actually earn traffic in your niche — proven with their investment, not your guesswork. It also reveals their strategic dependence: a competitor whose traffic sits on two pages is fragile; one spread across hundreds is structurally strong.

Why should I run this on my own site?

Because your top pages are your leverage points: the best places to add internal links to pages you’re pushing, the first pages to refresh when they slip, and the highest-ROI spots for monetization improvements.

A competitor’s top page targets a keyword I want — now what?

Study why it wins: format, depth, freshness, backlinks. Then build the version that’s meaningfully better on at least one axis and at parity on the rest. "Same but newer" rarely displaces an entrenched page; "same but with the data table Google’s snippet wants" often does.