ยท mypage.cc
How to Customize Your Link in Bio
Customize your link in bio the right way: pick a theme, set an accent color, choose a layout, add a photo and bio, order blocks, and add a custom domain.
A link in bio is the first thing a lot of people see when they look you up, so it is worth more than a default template and a stack of gray buttons. The trick is to customize in a way that looks intentional rather than busy. Below is a clear order to work through, from the look of the page down to the details, so you end up with something that feels like yours and still reads well on a phone.
Start with a theme, not a blank canvas
The fastest way to a page that looks designed is to start from a finished design instead of styling everything by hand. On mypage.cc you choose from 60+ premium themes, and each one is a full design system: typography, colors, spacing, button shapes, and radii that already agree with each other.
Because the theme handles the hard design decisions, you avoid the most common mistake, which is mixing fonts and colors that do not belong together. Switching themes is instant and never breaks your layout, so try several and keep the one that fits your work. A photographer might want something quiet and minimal, a musician might want something dark and bold. Pick the mood first, then move on.
Set an accent color that ties the page together
Once a theme is in place, the accent color is the single most powerful small change you can make. The accent ties buttons, highlights, and small details together, and it is usually what people remember.
Choose one color and let it do the work everywhere. If you have a brand color, use it. If you do not, pick a shade that suits the mood you want and matches your photos. Resist the urge to use several bright colors at once, since one consistent accent reads as deliberate while many reads as noise. A single accent over a strong theme is most of what makes a page feel finished.
Choose a layout that fits your content
The same content can read very differently depending on how the page is structured. A layout decides where your photo sits, how large it is, and how the rest of the page flows around it. mypage.cc treats layout as its own choice, separate from the theme, so you can keep the colors you like and still change the shape.
A cover layout turns your photo into a full-width hero with your name over it, which suits creators and anyone whose face is the brand. A portrait layout places a tall photo beside your name, which suits a more editorial feel. A simple stacked layout keeps the focus on the links. Try a couple and see which one makes your most important content stand out.
Add a photo and a bio that sound like you
Customization is not only colors and shapes, it is also the words and the picture. A clear, well-lit photo of your face or your work builds trust faster than any logo. Use a real image rather than a stock one, and keep it simple so it still reads at small sizes.
For the bio, say who you are and what someone gets from following you, in a sentence or two. Skip the buzzwords. If you are stuck, mypage.cc can draft a first version from a single sentence about yourself, then you edit it down to your voice. A short, specific bio beats a long, vague one every time. For more ideas on what to put on the page, see link in bio ideas.
Order your blocks by what matters
A page is built from blocks: links, social icons, image galleries, video embeds, text, contact buttons, a built-in tip jar, auto-updating feeds, and Instagram-style stories. The power is in the order. Visitors read top to bottom and their attention fades as they scroll, so the top of the page is your most valuable space.
Put your most important action first, whether that is a featured video, a contact button, or your top link. Group related items so the page has a rhythm rather than a random pile. Because every block works under every theme, you can rearrange freely without anything breaking. Drag the most important thing to the top, and keep the page short enough that nothing important hides below the fold.
Add a custom domain for the final polish
When you want the page to feel like a real home on the web rather than a hosted link, a custom domain is the finishing touch. On Pro you can connect your own domain, so your page lives at yourname.com instead of a shared path. It looks more professional in a bio, on a business card, and when someone says it out loud.
A custom domain also makes the page yours in a lasting way, since the address stays the same even as you change themes, layouts, and links underneath. It is the kind of detail people notice without being able to say why.
Keep it consistent and let it breathe
The last rule of customization is restraint. One theme, one accent, a layout that fits, a clear photo, and blocks in priority order will beat a page crammed with effects. Consistency is what makes a page look designed, and white space is what makes it easy to read on a phone.
You can do all of this for free to start. Claim mypage.cc/yourname, choose a theme and accent, drop in your photo and links, and publish. The page goes live in about two minutes, and you can keep refining it any time.