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EclusiveLink

For agencies and studios

White Label Link in Bio: Your Brand on Every Client Page

A white label link in bio lets your agency run every client's page on the client's own domain, with your branding or theirs and none of the platform's. Manage the whole roster from one place, report revenue per client, and hand off a page that never says who built it.

Gated and paid links on every plan. No platform branding, ever.

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The short answer

A white label link in bio is a bio-link page an agency or studio runs for clients with no visible platform branding, usually on a custom domain per client, managed from one dashboard. The reader sees the client's brand only, and the agency controls the pages, the analytics, and the billing.

Most consumer platforms do not offer true white labeling. Linktree, for example, sells "private label" templates and badge removal but has no native white-label product, so agencies bolt on custom domains through third-party proxies. ExclusiveLink is built for this: a custom domain per client from the Pro plan up, zero platform branding on any tier, and roster-level reporting across every page you manage.

The reason agencies care is margin and retention. A branded, client-owned page you manage centrally is a recurring service you can charge for, and a client whose page lives on their own domain does not churn as easily as one renting a generic subdomain.

Last updated July 2026

01Define it

What white label actually means for a bio link

The phrase gets used loosely. For an agency, it comes down to three concrete things a reader should never be able to detect.

The page lives on the client's domain

True white labeling means links.theirbrand.com or theirbrand.com, not yourtool.com/theirbrand. The domain is the single biggest signal of ownership, and it is the one most consumer tools make hardest to get. A client whose audience sees their own domain reads the page as theirs, because it is.

No platform badge, anywhere

No "made with" footer, no platform logo, no upsell banner on the page. The client's audience should have no way to tell which software renders the page. On ExclusiveLink there is no platform branding on any plan, so this is the default rather than a feature you unlock at the top tier.

One roster, managed centrally

An agency does not want twenty logins. White labeling at scale means one dashboard that lists every client page, who can edit each one, and what each is earning, with the ability to spin up a new client page in minutes and hand it over clean.

02The gap in the market

Why the popular tools are not really white label

If you have tried to run client pages on Linktree or a similar consumer tool, you already know where it falls down. Here is exactly why.

Linktree does not sell a native white-label product. It offers private-label templates and lets paid users remove the Linktree badge, but the page still lives on a linktr.ee URL unless you route a custom domain through a third-party proxy service, which is a workaround, not a feature. For an agency managing ten or thirty clients, that means a stack of manual domain hacks, no central roster, and a page that is one settings change away from showing someone else's branding.

The dedicated reseller tools that do exist tend to be built for volume over quality: cheap, generic bio pages you rebrand and resell at a markup. They solve the branding problem and create a new one, because the page itself is a commodity template with a basic link list and shallow analytics. That is fine if you are selling a $10 a month add-on. It is not fine if your agency's whole pitch is that the client's page should sell.

The gap is a tool that is white label and premium at the same time: your client's own domain, zero platform branding, and a page built around selling, with gated and paid links and per-link revenue analytics, not just a list of buttons. That is the space this page is about. If you are comparing us against Linktree specifically for client work, the Linktree alternative breakdown covers the wider feature gap.

03The feature set

What your agency gets on a white label plan

Everything here is aimed at one outcome: running client pages as a profitable, low-friction recurring service.

A custom domain per client

Point each client's page at their own domain or a subdomain you control on their behalf. The audience never leaves the client's brand, and you are not stitching together proxy services to fake it. Custom domains are available from the Pro plan up.

Gated and paid links, not just a list

Every client page can gate content behind an email or a payment, sell a product in a couple of taps, and schedule links around a launch. That is what turns a bio page from a directory into a revenue channel you can show a client results from.

Revenue analytics per client

Report per-link clicks, revenue per click, and UTM attribution for each client, so your monthly update shows what the page earned rather than a vanity click count. Exportable numbers make the renewal conversation easy.

One roster, roles, and clean handoff

See every client page in one view, assign who can edit what, and hand a finished page to a client without a trace of scaffolding. Onboarding a new client is minutes, not a rebuild. The link in bio for agencies page goes deeper on roster workflows.

04How it works

From new client to live branded page in four steps

The point of a white label setup is that this is fast and repeatable, so each new client costs you minutes of setup, not a project.

1

Add the client

Create a new page in your roster and drop in their handle, colors, and offers. The starting point is a premium layout, not a blank template.

2

Connect their domain

Point their domain or a subdomain at the page. From the first visit, the audience sees the client's brand and nobody else's.

3

Set the offers and gates

Add the paid products, the gated content, and the scheduled launch links. This is where the page starts earning instead of just listing.

4

Report and renew

Pull the client's revenue and click data each month, show what the page earned, and let the numbers carry the renewal.

05The honest comparison

White label options for agencies, compared

There are three ways agencies handle this today. Here is what each actually gives you, including where we are not the cheapest.

Approach Custom domain per client Zero platform branding Built to sell Best for
Linktree plus a domain proxy Workaround only Badge removal on paid Basic link list One or two clients, low effort
Generic reseller tool Yes Yes Commodity template Volume reselling on price
ExclusiveLink Yes, native from Pro Yes, on every plan Gated and paid links, analytics Agencies whose pitch is that the page sells

To be straight about it: if your agency just needs to slap a client logo on a cheap link list and resell it for a small monthly markup, a generic reseller tool will be cheaper than us and will do the job. We are not the low-cost option, and we are not going to pretend a page built to sell is worth the same as a commodity template.

Where we earn the price is when the page is part of how you prove your value: a client's own domain, no platform footprint, gated and paid links, and monthly revenue numbers you can put in a report. That is a service you can charge real money for and keep, rather than a $10 add-on that competes on price and churns.

06Questions

White label link in bio, answered directly

What is a white label link in bio?

A white label link in bio is a bio-link page run for a client with no visible platform branding, usually on the client's own domain and managed by an agency from a central dashboard. The audience sees only the client's brand, while the agency controls the page, the analytics, and the billing behind it.

Can you white label Linktree?

Not natively. Linktree offers private-label templates and lets paid users remove its badge, but it has no built-in white-label product, so the page stays on a linktr.ee URL unless you route a custom domain through a third-party proxy. That is a manual workaround rather than a supported agency feature, which is why agencies at scale look for a tool with native custom domains.

How do I add a custom domain to a client's link in bio?

On a platform with native custom domains, you point the client's domain or a subdomain at their page with a single DNS record, and the page serves on that domain with no platform branding. On ExclusiveLink this is available from the Pro plan up and takes minutes per client, rather than a proxy setup you have to maintain.

What is the best white label link in bio tool for agencies?

It depends on your goal. If you resell cheap pages on price, a generic reseller platform is the fit. If your agency's pitch is that the client's page should actually sell, you want native custom domains, zero platform branding, gated and paid links, and per-client revenue analytics in one roster, which is what ExclusiveLink is built for.

Does a white label page hurt SEO or trust?

The opposite, usually. A page on the client's own domain builds the client's brand and domain authority instead of the platform's, and audiences trust a branded domain more than a shared subdomain. The key is a real custom domain with proper HTTPS, which native white labeling gives you and a proxy workaround often complicates.

Run every client page as your own

Their domain, their brand, zero platform footprint.

ExclusiveLink gives your agency a custom domain per client, no platform branding on any plan, and revenue analytics across the whole roster. Build a client page and see it in minutes.