Ahrefs
Use for: Backlink analysis, competitor research, keyword difficulty
The single most expensive thing in my stack. Worth it for any agency. Not worth it for a single small-biz site.
I've bought and tested 50+ SEO tools with my own money. Here are the 27 that survived into my daily Maxinium workflow - plus the overrated ones I no longer pay for.
Use for: Backlink analysis, competitor research, keyword difficulty
The single most expensive thing in my stack. Worth it for any agency. Not worth it for a single small-biz site.
Use for: Keyword research, position tracking, site audit
Better UI than Ahrefs for beginners. Keyword database slightly smaller in LK. I run both - not either/or.
Use for: Keyword search volume, seasonality
Free but gives volume ranges not exact numbers unless you run ads. Good enough for 80% of research.
Use for: In-SERP keyword data
Cheapest tool I use - shows volume and CPC right in Google. Credit-based pricing, lasts months.
Use for: Finding question-format queries
Good for finding FAQ topics. Use once a month, not daily.
Use for: Site audit, broken links, redirect chains, indexability
Desktop app. Painful UI, irreplaceable output. Free tier up to 500 URLs works for small sites.
Use for: Client-friendly site audit reports
Prettier reports than Screaming Frog - send these to clients directly.
Use for: Clicks, impressions, ranking, indexing, Core Web Vitals
Not optional. Ground truth. If a site does not have GSC set up, nothing else matters.
Use for: Core Web Vitals testing
Use the API version (via Screaming Frog or a custom script) to audit every URL on a big site at once.
Use for: Waterfall analysis
Good complement to PSI - different methodology catches different issues.
Use for: Content brief + on-page scoring
Its NLP keyword suggestions save hours on content planning. Expensive but it pays for itself on the second article.
Use for: AI-assisted content briefs
Cheaper Surfer alternative. AI output is lower quality, briefs are slightly weaker.
Use for: Enterprise content grading
Not worth 2x Surfer's price for most users. Agencies already using it can stay - no one else should switch to it.
Use for: Keyword clustering, brief drafting, schema generation
The single biggest productivity tool added to my stack since 2023.
Use for: Long-form content editing, careful reasoning
Better than GPT-4 at nuanced editing and staying on voice. I use Claude for final content polish.
Use for: Citation-grounded research
Good for research when you need sources. Also a key GEO target - get cited here.
Use for: Tracking AI citations
Worth it for agencies monitoring clients. Too expensive for a single site - just ask the AI directly monthly.
Use for: Traffic, conversions, user journey
Required. GA4 is less intuitive than Universal Analytics, but it is the only option.
Use for: Daily rank tracking
Part of Ahrefs subscription - no separate fee.
Use for: Enterprise rank tracking
Accurate but expensive. Ahrefs/Semrush tracking is good enough for 99% of use cases.
Use for: Meta, schema, XML sitemap, redirects
My default on every WordPress site. Lighter than Yoast, cheaper than RankMath Pro, better schema coverage than either.
Use for: Basic on-page SEO
Market leader by installs but bloated and slow. Free tier is fine for a new blog. Avoid Premium.
Use for: On-page + schema
Genuinely feature-rich free tier. The trade-off is it is heavy on admin queries.
Use for: Fast, lean, Core-Web-Vitals-friendly WordPress sites
My default WordPress stack for the last five years.
Use for: Checking keyword over-use
At alstonantony.com - no signup, no ads.
Use for: Correlating traffic drops to Google update dates
Free tool at alstonantony.com for quick penalty hypothesis.
Use for: Converting headlines to title case, sentence case
Writer utility - small but people use it daily.
Before you drop $89-$500/month on something, email Alston. If he's tested it (and he probably has), he'll tell you honestly whether it's worth it for your situation - no affiliate link, no upsell, just the truth.