Comparison

InLinks vs SEOwind in 2026: Entity-based internal linking vs white-label AI content production

One builds a knowledge graph and automates internal links from a free plan up to $196 a month. The other runs AI drafts through a multi-agent research pipeline and a human editor, starting at $189 a month billed annually. They rarely compete for the same budget line.

Updated July 3, 2026
InLinks
SEOwind
Key takeaways
  • InLinks has a permanent free plan and paid tiers from $49/month. SEOwind has no free tier at all; its cheapest option is $189/month billed annually, a 12-month commitment with no month-to-month option.
  • SEOwind's human editorial review is not included on its own $189/month Platform tier. It only ships with the $3,000/month SEO Services tier or the custom-priced White-Label Content tier.
  • InLinks offers API access starting on its $49/month Freelancer plan. SEOwind has no API access on any pricing tier.
  • SEOwind offers genuine white-label delivery, but only on its top custom-priced tier. InLinks has no white-label option on any plan, a gap it names directly in its own product limitations.
  • InLinks improves structure and coverage of existing pages: internal links, entity gaps, and schema markup. SEOwind writes net-new articles grounded in retrieved sources through RAG. They rarely replace each other in the same workflow.
  • InLinks bills monthly and lets you cancel any time. SEOwind's Platform tier locks in a year of billing upfront, which matters if you are still deciding whether AI-assisted content production fits your process.

InLinks and SEOwind both sit in the Content Engineering category, but they solve different problems for a content team. InLinks works on the pages you already have: it crawls a site, builds a knowledge graph of the entities each page covers, and automates internal linking, content gap analysis, and schema markup on top of that graph, with a free plan and a $49/month Freelancer tier. SEOwind produces new articles: a multi-agent workflow researches a topic with Retrieval-Augmented Generation, drafts the piece, scores it against EEAT signals, and, on its higher tiers, routes it through a human editor before white-label delivery to an agency client. If your problem is that a content-heavy site has never had its internal links or entity coverage audited, InLinks is built for exactly that. If your problem is producing client-ready articles at volume without a full-time writer, SEOwind is the closer fit, provided you budget for the tier that actually includes a human reviewing the output.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
InLinksFreeFreelancers, small agencies, and in-house content leads who want to fix internal linking and entity coverage on a site they already have content on, without a monthly fee that scales with articles produced.
SEOwind$189/mo (annual)Content agencies billing clients for ongoing article production, 20 or more pieces a month, who need RAG-grounded research and can budget for the tier that includes a human editor and white-label delivery.

SEOwind

White-label AI content production with human editorial review for agencies

Full review →
SEOwind screenshot

SEOwind splits article production into stages handled by separate AI agents rather than one generation pass. One agent gathers research, another builds structure, a third drafts, and the platform retrieves real sources through Retrieval-Augmented Generation before any of that happens, which is aimed directly at the confident-sounding, wrong claims that plague prompt-only AI writers.

Every finished draft is scored against Google's Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness signals, flagging specific gaps for a reviewer to check. That reviewer, though, is not part of the base $189/month Platform tier. Human editorial review only appears once you're on the $3,000/month SEO Services package or the custom-priced White-Label Content tier, where agencies can also deliver output under their own brand with no SEOwind references visible to the client.

There is no API on any tier, so getting content out of SEOwind means the platform interface or a CMS connection, not a programmatic pull. The pricing floor and the fact that editorial review sits above the entry tier both point to the same buyer: an agency already selling content as a service at real volume, not a team testing whether AI-assisted writing works for them.

Pricing
Feature
Platform
$189/mo (annual)
SEO Services
$3,000/mo
White-Label Content
Custom
AI Article GenerationYesYesYes
Human Editorial ReviewNoYesYes
RAG-Powered ResearchYesYesYes
White-Label DeliveryNoNoYes
API AccessNoNoNo
Best for: Content agencies billing clients for ongoing article production, 20 or more pieces a month, who need RAG-grounded research and can budget for the tier that includes a human editor and white-label delivery.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
InLinks
SEOwind
Core functionEntity-based internal linking and knowledge graph automationMulti-agent AI article production with RAG research and EEAT scoring
Entity / knowledge graph mappingYesNo
AI article draftingNoYes
RAG-grounded researchNoYes
Human editorial review includedNot applicable, no article draftingNo on Platform tier; yes on SEO Services and White-Label Content
Content gap analysisYes (from Freelancer plan)Not a named feature (keyword research and SEO optimization instead)
Schema markup generationYesNo
White-label deliveryNoYes (White-Label Content tier, custom price)
API accessYes (from Freelancer plan)No
Free tierYesNo
Starting price$49/month (free plan also available)$189/month (annual)

Which should you choose?

Sites needing internal linking and entity coverage fixed on existing pagesInLinks
Agencies producing client-ready articles at volumeSEOwind
Teams that want to test a tool with a free plan before payingInLinks
Teams needing RAG-grounded research to reduce factual errors in draftsSEOwind
Teams needing API access for programmatic workflowsInLinks
Agencies wanting a human editor reviewing output, even if it costs moreSEOwind
Freelancers and solo consultants on a tight monthly budgetInLinks

Comparing these two on price alone misses the point, since they don't produce the same output. InLinks makes what you already have work harder: better internal link structure, entity gaps closed, schema written automatically. SEOwind makes more of something new: articles researched, drafted, and, on the right tier, edited by a person before a client sees them. A content-heavy site with years of unlinked pages needs InLinks. An agency selling 20 articles a month to clients needs SEOwind, and specifically needs to budget past the entry tier if a human editor reviewing every piece is non-negotiable.

Bottom line

Start with InLinks' free plan if your real problem is a site full of content that has never had its internal links or entity coverage audited, and expect to pay $49/month once you want content gap analysis and API access. Go with SEOwind if you're producing new articles for clients at volume and can commit to at least the $189/month annual Platform tier, but budget for SEO Services or White-Label Content if a human editor in the loop matters to you, since it isn't included at the base price. Neither tool tracks how your content performs once AI models start citing or ignoring it; that measurement layer sits outside what either product does.

Frequently asked questions

Is InLinks or SEOwind better for a content agency in 2026?

It depends on which part of the content workflow the agency needs help with. InLinks fixes internal linking, entity gaps, and schema on content you already have, starting free. SEOwind produces new articles through a multi-agent research and drafting pipeline, but the human editorial review and white-label delivery an agency actually needs only appear on tiers above $189/month.

Does SEOwind include a human editor on its cheapest plan?

No, the $189/month Platform tier does not include human editorial review. That step only ships with the $3,000/month SEO Services tier or the custom-priced White-Label Content tier, so a team on the base plan is responsible for reviewing its own AI-generated drafts.

Can InLinks generate new articles the way SEOwind does?

No, InLinks does not write new content. It crawls a site's existing pages, builds a knowledge graph of the entities they cover, and automates internal linking, content gap identification, and schema markup on top of that graph. For net-new article production, SEOwind's multi-agent workflow is the relevant tool.

Do InLinks or SEOwind offer an API for custom workflows?

InLinks includes API access starting on its $49/month Freelancer plan. SEOwind has no API on any tier, including its custom-priced White-Label Content plan, so integrating SEOwind output into an external workflow means going through the platform interface or a CMS connection instead.

Which tool is cheaper to try before committing to a paid plan?

InLinks is the lower-risk option: it has a permanent free plan you can use to test the entity linking approach with no billing commitment. SEOwind has no free tier, and its lowest tier is billed annually at $189/month with no month-to-month option, so there is no way to try it for a single month first.

Do InLinks or SEOwind track brand mentions in AI chatbot answers?

Neither tool tracks brand mentions in AI-generated answers. InLinks states directly in its own FAQ that it does not monitor AI chatbot citations, only traditional entity and linking signals. SEOwind's EEAT scoring is built for traditional search authority, not AI visibility tracking, so a dedicated AI visibility tool is needed for that layer.

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