--- title: "Keyword Difficulty Bands for SaaS" description: "Keyword difficulty scores from tools mislead more than they help. The band-based approach — checking the actual top 10 against your domain's profile — picks targets you'll rank for in months, not years." url: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas" verifiedAt: "2026-06-09" canonical: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas" --- # Keyword Difficulty Bands for SaaS > TL;DR — Tool-supplied keyword difficulty scores (Ahrefs KD, Semrush KD) are blunt — they're useful for sorting but they don't tell you whether you can win. The reliable test is to manually inspect the top 10 SERP results: if at least 2 of the 10 are peer-sized to you (similar DR, similar site age), the query is in your competitive band. Anything else is aspirational. In plain English: Keyword difficulty banding inspects the actual top 10 SERP composition to decide if a SaaS domain can realistically rank for a query. Tool difficulty scores are useful for sorting but unreliable for committing — the SERP composition test is the ground truth. ## Key takeaways - Tool difficulty scores are sorting aids, not commitment criteria — verify with manual SERP inspection. - If 2+ of the top 10 results are peer-sized to your domain, the query is in your band. - If page 1 is wall-to-wall Fortune 500 publishers, the query is unwinnable until your domain authority climbs. - Bands shift as your domain grows — re-audit every 6 months. - Better to win 20 band-2 queries than to plateau at position 30 for one band-5 query. ## Definition Keyword difficulty banding for SaaS is the discipline of grouping target queries into tiers based on the actual top 10 SERP composition relative to the targeting domain — not based on tool-supplied difficulty scores. ## Why it matters The single most common SaaS keyword research mistake is chasing band-3 and band-4 queries because the volume looks attractive. The pages publish, never rank past position 30, and the team concludes 'SEO doesn't work for us'. SEO worked — the keyword choice didn't. Banding forces honest acknowledgment of what your domain can win this year vs what it can win in year two, three, or never. ## Why tool difficulty scores aren't enough Ahrefs KD and Semrush KD compute a score from backlink data on the top ranking pages. They're useful for sorting a list of 500 candidate keywords from 'definitely too hard' to 'probably possible'. They don't tell you whether YOUR domain can rank — they treat all domains the same. Two sites with the same KD score and the same content quality can have vastly different outcomes for the same query: one ranks page one, the other plateaus at position 40. The difference is usually peer composition in the SERP that the KD score doesn't surface. ## The peer-sized site test For each shortlisted query, search it manually in an incognito window. Look at the top 10 organic results. For each, check the domain's age (whois) and domain rating (Ahrefs free tool). Count how many domains are peer-sized to yours: within ±15 DR, within ±2 years of age, similar in apparent scale. If 2 or more are peer-sized, the query is in your band. If 1 is, you might rank long-term. If 0 are, the query is outside your band — pick a more specific variant. ## Banding within your reach Band 1: 3+ peer-sized sites in the top 10. These are queries where the competition isn't a domain authority moat. Win rate is ~80% within 6 months given good on-page and topical signal. Target heavily. Band 2: 2 peer-sized sites in the top 10. Win rate is ~50% within 9 months. Target selectively with the best content. Band 3: 1 peer-sized site in the top 10. Win rate is ~20% within 18 months. Build pillar-level pages here but don't commit the cluster. Band 4+: 0 peer-sized sites in the top 10. Win rate is near zero until your domain authority climbs. Defer. ## How bands shift over time As your domain grows — gains backlinks, ages, accumulates ranking pages — queries that were band 4 drift into band 3, then band 2, then band 1. Quarterly re-audit catches that movement and surfaces newly-winnable queries. Conversely, queries you ranked for in year one can become harder if a major competitor enters the SERP. Track positions monthly and re-band any query that drops 10+ positions in a 30-day window. ## Quick answers ### Are Ahrefs and Semrush keyword difficulty scores reliable? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas#qa-kd) They're directional. KD 0–30 is broadly winnable for most SaaS sites; KD 70+ usually isn't without significant link investment. The 30–70 middle band is where tools mislead most — the only reliable test is manual SERP inspection. ### What counts as a peer-sized site? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas#qa-peer) Similar domain rating (within ±15), similar age (within ±2 years), similar referring-domain count (within ±50%). If two such sites rank in the top 10 for a query, your domain can plausibly rank too. ### What if no peer-sized site ranks in the top 10? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas#qa-no-peer) The query is currently out of your band. Two options: pick a more specific modifier variant where peer-sized sites do rank, or defer the query until your domain authority climbs into the band. ### How should I mix bands in a content plan? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/keyword-research-for-saas/difficulty-bands-for-saas#qa-mix) ~70% band-1 (very winnable), ~25% band-2 (stretch), ~5% band-3+ (aspirational pillar targets). Front-load band-1 in the first 6 months so the site has compounding rankings to lean on when chasing harder queries later.