---
url: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/publish-your-blog-on-bloglovin/'
language: 'en'
title: 'How to Publish Your Blog on Bloglovin: A Step-by-Step Guide'
author:
  name: 'Abdullah Nouman'
  url: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/author/nouman/'
date: '2024-12-04T22:19:25-06:00'
modified: '2026-06-27T19:40:40-05:00'
type: 'post'
categories:
  - 'Link Building'
image: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/wpc-img-7276-Sut4a0.avif'
published: true
---

# How to Publish Your Blog on Bloglovin: A Step-by-Step Guide

Bloglovin is a blog discovery and following platform where readers subscribe to the feeds they like and read new posts in one place. Publishing your blog there is a quick way to claim your feed, pick up a backlink, and put your posts in front of an audience that search alone will not always send you.

 

Below is the full setup, start to finish, plus an honest read on how much Bloglovin actually moves the needle today and where it fits alongside your other distribution.

  

### Key Takeaways

 

- Bloglovin syndicates your RSS feed, so once you connect and verify your blog, every new post shows up there on its own.
- The claim step, adding a verification link or meta tag, is what proves you own the blog and earns you a real (nofollow) backlink.
- Traffic from Bloglovin is modest in 2026, so treat it as one low-effort distribution channel, not a primary growth lever.
- It pulls its weight best in lifestyle, fashion, food, and similar visual niches, where most of its remaining audience sits.

  Table of Contents

- What Bloglovin is, and what it does for your blog
- How to publish your blog on Bloglovin, step by step
- Getting real value out of Bloglovin
- Is publishing your blog on Bloglovin still worth it?
- Update Logs

 

## What Bloglovin is, and what it does for your blog

 

At its core, [Bloglovin](https://www.bloglovin.com/) is a feed reader with a social layer. People follow blogs they enjoy, and Bloglovin pulls in each blog’s RSS feed so followers get a tidy stream of new posts without hopping between sites. For you as the publisher, that means once your feed is connected, you are not re-posting anything by hand; new articles flow in automatically.

 

There are two things you actually get out of it. The first is exposure to Bloglovin’s own readership, which leans heavily toward fashion, beauty, food, and lifestyle. The second is the claim link, a small but legitimate part of your [off-page SEO](https://wpconsults.com/what-is-offsite-seo/) footprint, because it points back to your domain from an established platform.

 

One thing to keep straight up front: Bloglovin shows a syndicated copy of your feed, not the original page. That is fine, because the canonical version still lives on your site, but it is worth knowing your content is being mirrored rather than moved. Google has long been comfortable with [syndicated content as long as canonicalization is clear](https://developers.google.com/search/docs/crawling-indexing/consolidate-duplicate-urls), and Bloglovin’s setup respects that.

 

## How to publish your blog on Bloglovin, step by step

 

The whole process takes about ten minutes, and most of it is one-time setup you never touch again.

 

### Step 1: Create your Bloglovin account

 

Head to [Bloglovin’s website](https://www.bloglovin.com/) and sign up with email, Google, or Facebook. Confirm the verification email if you registered with an address, because an unverified account cannot claim a blog later. This is the reader-and-publisher account in one, so the same login runs your following feed and your own blog.

 

### Step 2: Add your blog

 

Once you are logged in, open your profile menu (top right) and choose **Add Blog**, then paste your blog’s homepage URL and submit. Bloglovin will look up your RSS feed automatically, so you usually do not need to find the feed URL yourself; if it cannot detect one, point it at *yoursite.com/feed/*, which is the default on WordPress.

 

### Step 3: Claim and verify ownership (the step that matters)

 

This is the part people skip and then wonder why nothing feels connected. To prove the blog is yours, Bloglovin gives you a small piece of code, either a meta tag for the `<head>` or a “Follow my blog with Bloglovin” link, and you add it to your site before clicking **Verify**.

 

On WordPress the cleanest route is a header-scripts plugin or your theme’s header settings for the meta tag; if you prefer the link method, drop the claim link into a footer widget or a published post and Bloglovin will scan for it. Once verification passes, the blog is tied to your profile and that claim link becomes your backlink, so do not delete it afterward.

 

### Step 4: Finish your profile and let the feed run

 

Add a profile photo, a short bio that says what your blog covers, and links to your other social accounts, because a complete profile is what convinces a browsing reader to hit follow. After that, you are done with manual work: Bloglovin syncs your feed, so new posts appear automatically. To compound the effect, add Bloglovin’s follow widget to your own site and share your profile link the same way you would any other channel.

 

## Getting real value out of Bloglovin

 

Setting it up and forgetting it is fine, but a little effort changes what you get back. Engagement is the lever here: following blogs in your niche and leaving genuine comments puts your profile in front of their audiences, which is how discovery actually happens on the platform. A bare profile that only broadcasts your own posts rarely picks up followers.

 

It also pays to be realistic about fit. If you publish technical or B2B content, Bloglovin’s audience is not really yours, and the main upside is the backlink and the syndicated copy. If you are in a visual consumer niche, the same setup can send a steady trickle of engaged readers, and that is where the time spent on the profile earns its keep. Either way, think of it as one more place your content lives, the same way you would treat getting [discovered on other engines and platforms](https://wpconsults.com/submit-url-to-duckduckgo/).

 

## Is publishing your blog on Bloglovin still worth it?

 

Honestly, yes, but only because it is cheap to do, not because it is a growth engine. Bloglovin is a fraction of the traffic source it was years ago, so I would not build any strategy around it or expect meaningful numbers from the feed alone. What makes it worth the ten minutes is that the claim gives you a legitimate backlink and a permanent syndication channel that keeps working with zero upkeep.

 

So set it up once, finish the profile properly, and then put your real distribution effort where your readers actually are. Bloglovin is a nice-to-have in the mix, not the thing you lean on.

  

## Update Logs

 

**28 Jun 2026**

 

- Rewrote the guide with a clearer claim-and-verify walkthrough and an honest 2026 read on how much traffic Bloglovin really drives.
