Topical authority is the degree to which a website, brand, or content creator is recognised as a credible and comprehensive source within a defined knowledge domain.
That recognition can come from search engines, AI systems, or human audiences, but it only counts when it’s tied to trust and depth within a specific subject area.
It’s built through depth, not volume.
A site develops topical authority by covering a subject with enough breadth and specificity that it becomes the natural reference point for that domain. Not by publishing large volumes of content targeting isolated search terms.
Topical authority operates at the knowledge domain level, not the keyword level.
A knowledge domain is a structured subject area, like relationship counselling, structural engineering, or commercial landscape design. (Think: If a Wikipedia article exists its likely a topic or knowledge domain)
Each domain contains multiple subtopics, and those topics can be expressed in different ways: answering specific questions, exploring different angles, or introducing original perspectives.
Authority builds when a site demonstrates real expertise across that domain through consistent, substantive, and interconnected content.
Keyword-based strategies treat queries in isolation. One page. One term. One intent. Topical authority works differently.
It creates a recognisable, trustworthy presence around a subject, so search engines and AI systems begin to associate the the site or entity itself with that knowledge domain itself, not just individual pages with individual queries.
In practice, topical authority shows up as:
- Consistent coverage of a subject across multiple angles and content types
- Clear relationships between content within that domain
- Demonstrated expertise (experience, credentials, original thinking, proof of outcomes)
- External recognition through links, citations, and references
