Inspiration
Link in Bio Ideas: 17 High-Converting Examples From Real Creators
· by ExclusiveLink
The best link in bio ideas share one shape: three to five links, one clear money link on top, and one gate that captures an email or a payment. Below are 17 page structures that follow that shape, organized by creator type, with the reasoning behind each so you can adapt rather than copy.
For musicians
- The release page. New single on top, pre-save or stream links beneath, everything else below the fold. During release week this page has exactly one job.
- The tour router. Tickets link per city or one ticketing link, then merch, then the mailing list. Watching clicks per link tells you which cities are warm before you route the next run.
- The vault. One email-gated link labeled "Unreleased demo" above your public catalog. Superfans trade an address for the first listen; you build a list you own instead of renting reach from an algorithm.
- The drop with a deadline. A merch or vinyl presale link that expires on a date. Scarcity is honest here because the deadline is real, and an expiring link enforces it automatically. More structures like these live on the link in bio for musicians page.
For coaches and course creators
- The one-offer page. Your flagship program as the only prominent link, a testimonial line under it, booking link second. Coaches with five offers convert like coaches with none.
- The lead magnet ladder. A free checklist behind an email gate on top, the paid program second. The gate turns cold profile taps into a warm list, and the list buys the program later.
- The $29 tripwire. A priced mini-course or template pack between the freebie and the flagship. Buyers of a $29 product upgrade to a $500 program far more readily than subscribers do.
- The booking page. If you sell calls, put the calendar link first, priced if the call is paid. A price gate on a "strategy call" filters out the meetings that were never going to convert.
For artists and photographers
- The preset shop. Your preset or brush pack behind a price gate, $19 to $29, right at the top. This is the classic bio-link product: made once, sold nightly.
- The print counter. Limited prints with a visible count or end date, then the open portfolio. The bio link is where collectors check back.
- The commission slot list. A link that opens when slots open and expires when they fill. Scheduling the link means you never leave a dead "commissions closed" link up top.
- The wallpaper gate. A free phone-wallpaper pack behind an email gate. Costs you nothing, converts casual admirers into a mailing list, and the list hears about the next drop first.
For streamers
- The live-first page. Channel link on top, schedule second, support link third. When you are live, the top link is the only one that matters; keep it there permanently so muscle memory forms.
- The supporter tier. A priced link for your membership or tip page, framed as a product ("Ad-free VODs + Discord role") rather than a donation. Products convert better than requests.
- The overlay pack. Your stream overlays, alerts or emote templates behind a $9 to $19 gate. Other streamers are an audience too, and they buy tools.
For writers and podcasters
- The latest-episode page. Newest episode or essay first, subscribe links second, archive third. Recency signals an active show; a stale top link signals the opposite.
- The bonus chapter. A deleted scene, bonus episode or annotated draft behind an email gate. Readers who want more are exactly the readers you want on your list before the next book or season.
The rules hiding inside all 17
- Three to five links. Every link you add splits attention; pages with a dozen links convert on none of them.
- Money link on top. Order by what you want, weighted by what visitors want. The top slot gets the majority of taps.
- Exactly one gate. One email gate or one price gate per page state. A wall of locks reads as a paywall; a single lock reads as the good stuff.
- Read the clicks weekly. Per-link analytics turn these ideas into a loop: keep what gets tapped, cut what does not. That loop is the whole point of a link in bio that reports real numbers, and it is why plans that include full analytics are worth it; compare tiers on the link in bio pricing page.
Ideas are cheap to test when the page takes a minute to change. Open the link in bio maker, pick the structure closest to your work, and put a gate on the one link that deserves it. Next week, the click counts will tell you if you chose well.