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Keyword Research

Keyword Difficulty Explained: Find Keywords You Can Actually Rank For

Keyword difficulty is one of the most misunderstood metrics in SEO. Learn how it's calculated, what the scores truly mean, why low KD doesn't guarantee easy rankings, and how to build a keyword strategy that matches your site's current authority level.

Rank Crown Team
March 2026
16 min read

What Is Keyword Difficulty (KD)?

Keyword difficulty (KD) is a metric that estimates how hard it would be to achieve a first-page ranking in Google for a specific keyword. It is expressed as a number, almost universally on a 0 to 100 scale, where 0 represents no competition and 100 represents the most fiercely contested keywords on the internet.

KD is primarily based on the backlink profiles of the pages currently ranking in the top 10 results for that keyword. The logic is straightforward: if the pages ranking for a keyword have thousands of high-quality backlinks from authoritative domains, you will need a similarly strong backlink profile to compete — which takes significant time and effort to build.

Keyword difficulty is essential for keyword prioritization. Rather than targeting the highest-volume keywords (which are usually the hardest to rank for), smart SEO strategy involves finding keywords with a favorable balance of search volume, difficulty, and business value.

Key Takeaway

Keyword difficulty tells you how competitive the current SERP landscape is for a keyword — primarily measured by the link authority of pages already ranking. It is a relative measure, not an absolute barrier. Enough content quality and backlinks can rank for almost any keyword, but high-KD keywords require significantly more resources.

How Keyword Difficulty Is Calculated

There is no single universal formula for keyword difficulty — each SEO tool uses its own proprietary algorithm. However, most KD calculations share several common signals:

Backlink Quantity and Quality of Ranking Pages

Primary Factor

The dominant input in most KD formulas. The algorithm looks at the top 10 ranking pages and calculates the average number of referring domains pointing to them, weighted by the authority of those domains. Pages with links from many high-authority sites score higher, pushing up the keyword's difficulty.

Domain Authority / Domain Rating

Major Factor

Beyond page-level links, the overall authority of the domains hosting the ranking pages matters. If the top 10 results are dominated by Forbes, Wikipedia, and major industry publications, those domains have inherent authority advantages that a new site cannot easily overcome — even if individual page link counts are modest.

SERP Features Presence

Moderate Factor

Keywords with featured snippets, knowledge panels, People Also Ask boxes, and other SERP features that take up visual space push organic results lower on the page. Some tools factor in SERP feature prevalence because winning a top-3 click-driving position is harder when Google features take up the first screenful of results.

Content Quality and Topical Relevance

Emerging Factor

More sophisticated KD calculations are beginning to incorporate content signals — how comprehensively the top-ranking pages cover the topic, their estimated content length, the use of semantic entities, and E-E-A-T signals. This makes it harder to rank with thin content even for nominally 'low-KD' keywords.

Search Intent Alignment

Modifier

If all top-ranking results for a keyword are from a specific content type (e.g., all e-commerce product pages), a blog post targeting that keyword faces an inherent disadvantage regardless of its link profile. Intent mismatch effectively increases the practical difficulty of a keyword beyond what the KD score reflects.

In practice, Rank Crown's KD metric is powered by DataForSEO's comprehensive keyword data, which analyzes the backlink profiles of the actual top 10 ranking pages for each keyword in real-time, giving you difficulty scores that reflect current SERP competition rather than stale historical data.

KD Scale: What the Numbers Mean (0–100)

Here is how to interpret keyword difficulty scores in practical terms. Note that your site's authority level dramatically changes how these numbers apply to you specifically:

0–10
Very Easy

Extremely low competition. Often niche long-tail keywords, brand searches, or hyper-local queries. New sites with minimal backlinks can realistically rank within weeks with quality content alone.

11–30
Easy

Still manageable for newer sites. Typically 3–6 months to rank with good content and some link building. Great targets for sites in their first year — enough volume to be worthwhile, low enough competition to be achievable.

31–50
Moderate

Requires established authority and a deliberate link building campaign. Sites with 6–18 months of SEO history and 50+ referring domains should consider these. Expect 6–12 months to see significant ranking movement.

51–70
Hard

Competitive keywords dominated by well-established sites. Requires significant authority (DR 40+), excellent content, and sustained link building over 12+ months. Best suited to established websites in their niche.

71–90
Very Hard

Dominated by major brands, authoritative publications, or heavily funded sites. Requires DR 60+ and thousands of high-quality backlinks. Even with perfect content, expect 1–3+ years before breaking into page 1.

91–100
Extremely Hard

The most competitive keywords on the internet — 'insurance,' 'credit cards,' 'VPN.' These are controlled by massive domains with multi-million dollar link building budgets. Realistically unattainable for any site that isn't already a major authority.

Context Matters

These ranges are approximations for a site with DR 0–20. If your site has DR 50+, you can realistically target keywords in the 50–70 range. Always interpret KD relative to your site's current domain authority and backlink profile — not as an absolute scale.

Why Low KD Does Not Mean Easy to Rank

One of the most common mistakes in keyword research is treating keyword difficulty as the only factor that determines how hard a keyword is to rank for. A keyword can have a KD of 5 and still be nearly impossible to rank for — or have a KD of 45 and be very achievable. Here's why:

Search Intent Mismatch

If all top-ranking pages for a low-KD keyword are major e-commerce product pages and you're targeting it with a blog post, Google's algorithm may simply not rank your content for that query — regardless of your link count. KD doesn't capture intent mismatch, which can be just as prohibitive as link competition.

SERP Feature Lock-Out

Keywords with featured snippets, knowledge panels, or heavy ad placements may show low KD (few page-level backlinks needed) but deliver almost no clicks because SERP features consume the available click share. A keyword with KD 8 and 90% of clicks going to SERP features isn't worth targeting for organic traffic.

Brand Dominance

Some low-volume, low-KD queries are dominated by brand searches where users are looking for a specific company. Even if the KD is low, you simply cannot outrank a brand for their own branded queries. These appear as easy opportunities but deliver no practical ranking benefit.

Near-Zero Search Volume

KD of 0 often indicates a keyword with zero or near-zero monthly searches. There's no competition because nobody searches for it. Always check actual search volume alongside KD — a keyword needs both reasonable search volume AND achievable difficulty to be worth targeting.

Topic Authority Requirements

Google increasingly evaluates topical authority — how comprehensively your site covers a subject area. A new site without established topical authority may struggle to rank even for low-KD keywords in a niche where established sites have comprehensive coverage. Building topical depth matters alongside link acquisition.

The takeaway: always evaluate keywords on multiple dimensions simultaneously — KD, search volume, search intent, SERP feature prevalence, and business relevance. KD is an important input, not the only input.

How to Find Low-Difficulty, High-Value Keywords

The most valuable skill in keyword research is not finding high-volume keywords — it's finding keywords that are both achievable for your current authority level and commercially valuable. Here are proven research strategies:

Strategy 1: Long-Tail Keyword Mining

Long-tail keywords (3+ words, very specific queries) almost always have lower KD than their head keyword equivalents. "Best project management software for remote teams under $20" will have far less competition than "project management software."

Start with your seed keywords in Rank Crown's Keywords Explorer and filter for KD below your target threshold. Sort by search volume to surface the highest-volume low-difficulty opportunities. Don't ignore keywords with 50–500 monthly searches — collectively, long-tail keywords drive the majority of organic search traffic.

Strategy 2: Competitor Gap Analysis

Find keywords that your competitors rank for but you don't. Use Rank Crown's Site Explorer to analyze a competitor's organic keywords, then filter by KD to find their low-difficulty rankings you could realistically compete for.

Focus on competitors with similar domain authority to yours — their keyword rankings represent achievable targets. If a DR 25 competitor ranks for a keyword, your DR 22 site likely can too with equally good content.

Strategy 3: Question-Based Keywords

Question keywords ("how to," "what is," "why does," "when should") often have lower KD because they require specific informational content that many commercial sites don't create. They also frequently trigger featured snippet opportunities.

Use Rank Crown's keyword suggestions filtered by question format to find these opportunities. Questions with 1,000+ monthly searches and KD below 30 are excellent targets for FAQ-style content or dedicated how-to guides.

Strategy 4: Low-KD Variations of High-Intent Keywords

Commercial intent keywords ("buy," "best," "review," "vs," "alternative to") tend to have high business value. Many of these have high KD for their head version but much lower KD for long-tail variations.

"Best CRM software" might have KD 75, but "best CRM software for freelancers" might be KD 18 with 800 monthly searches. These narrower variations often convert better too, because the user intent is more specific.

The Keyword Difficulty Sweet Spot for New Websites

New websites (less than 12 months old, DR under 20, fewer than 50 referring domains) need a deliberate keyword difficulty strategy that matches their current authority. Targeting high-KD keywords too early wastes content budget on pages that won't rank for years.

Recommended KD Targets by Site Age and Authority

Brand New (0–6 months, DR 0–10)

KD 0–20

Focus almost entirely on long-tail, question-based keywords with minimal competition. Volume of 50–500/month is fine — these quick wins build authority and traffic momentum.

Early Stage (6–18 months, DR 10–25)

KD 10–35

Expand into slightly more competitive territory. Continue targeting long-tail but now include some medium-volume keywords. Should have enough topical coverage to start targeting category-level content.

Established (18–36 months, DR 25–45)

KD 20–55

Can now realistically compete for mid-difficulty keywords. Start allocating budget to pillar content targeting higher-volume keywords, backed by a cluster of supporting content.

Authority Site (3+ years, DR 45+)

KD 30–75

Competing for high-difficulty keywords becomes viable. Focus on topical comprehensiveness, E-E-A-T signals, and sustained link building for the most competitive terms in your industry.

The Snowball Effect

Ranking for easy keywords builds authority that makes harder keywords more achievable over time. Each piece of content that ranks attracts more backlinks. Each new backlink increases your domain rating. A higher domain rating makes the next set of keywords easier. Start achievable, and the snowball grows.

Using Rank Crown's Keyword Difficulty Tool

Rank Crown's Keywords Explorer provides keyword difficulty scores alongside search volume, CPC, and SERP analysis for any keyword. Here's how to use it to build an effective keyword strategy:

01

Enter Seed Keywords

Start with 5–10 broad topics relevant to your business. Rank Crown's Keywords Explorer will return hundreds of related keyword suggestions with KD scores, search volume, and trend data for each.

02

Apply KD and Volume Filters

Filter by your target KD range (based on your site's current authority) and minimum search volume (e.g., 100+ searches/month). This immediately narrows thousands of keywords down to your realistic opportunity set.

03

Check SERP Analysis

For your most promising keywords, click to view the full SERP analysis — see exactly which pages are ranking, their domain ratings, backlink counts, and estimated traffic. This gives you the context KD alone can't provide.

04

Identify Keyword Clusters

Group related keywords by search intent to plan content clusters. Instead of creating one page per keyword, identify the primary keyword for each cluster and create comprehensive content targeting the whole group — maximizing your content investment.

05

Track Your Rankings

Add your target keywords to Rank Crown's Rank Tracker to monitor your position over time. As you rank for easy keywords, use the authority gained to periodically revisit harder targets that were previously out of reach.

Explore keyword opportunities with Rank Crown

KD scores, search volume, SERP analysis, and trend data in one place.

Open Keywords Explorer

Keyword Difficulty Across Different Tools: Why Scores Differ

If you've ever compared KD scores for the same keyword across multiple SEO tools, you'll have noticed significant discrepancies. A keyword might be KD 35 in one tool, KD 58 in another, and KD 12 in a third. This can be confusing — here's why it happens:

Different Link Databases

Each SEO tool crawls the web independently and maintains its own backlink database. A tool with a larger, more comprehensive backlink database may detect more referring domains to ranking pages — resulting in higher KD scores. Conversely, a smaller database may undercount links and report lower scores.

Different Calculation Methodologies

Some tools use linear scales, others use logarithmic scales (where the difference between KD 80 and 90 is far greater than between 20 and 30). Some weight unique referring domains more heavily; others weigh link quality metrics differently. These algorithmic choices produce different outputs for identical inputs.

Different Data Freshness

SERPs change constantly. If Tool A updated its data last week and Tool B updated six months ago, they may be analyzing different sets of ranking pages — especially for competitive keywords where results shift frequently.

Additional Signal Weighting

Some tools incorporate non-link signals (content quality scores, SERP feature analysis, click-through rate adjustments) that others don't. A tool that factors in heavy featured snippet presence may score a keyword higher than one that only counts backlinks.

Best Practice

Pick one primary tool for keyword difficulty research and use it consistently. The absolute score matters less than your understanding of what is achievable at each score range within that tool's scale. Over time, you'll develop an intuition for which keywords your site can rank for based on your actual ranking history.

Strategy: Matching KD to Your Site's Authority Level

The most effective keyword strategy doesn't just look at KD in isolation — it creates a portfolio of keywords that matches your site's current capabilities while building toward harder targets over time. Here's a practical framework:

The 70/20/10 Keyword Portfolio Rule

70%

Now Targets

Keywords well within your current authority range. Expect to rank within 3–6 months. These generate traffic and authority that funds your harder keyword efforts.

20%

Stretch Targets

Keywords slightly above your typical range. Possible to rank with excellent content and some link building — 6–12 month timeline. Worth creating content now to start building authority for later.

10%

Aspirational Targets

Your competitive dream keywords. Create foundational content now, but accept that ranking will take 12–24+ months. These define where you're going, not where you are.

This portfolio approach ensures you always have traffic coming in (from your achievable keywords) while making progress toward your most valuable targets. It prevents the common mistake of either only targeting easy keywords (leaving value on the table long-term) or only targeting hard keywords (generating no organic traffic for years).

Revisit your keyword strategy quarterly. As your domain rating grows and you accumulate ranking history, update your KD threshold upward — keywords that were once out of reach become achievable faster than you might expect once your site has topical authority and a solid backlink profile.

Find Your Keyword Opportunities

Use Rank Crown's Keywords Explorer to discover low-difficulty, high-value keywords with KD scores, search volume, SERP analysis, and trend data — all in one place.