· mypage.cc
How to Make a Link in Bio Page (Step by Step)
Learn how to make a link in bio page step by step: claim a handle, add a photo and bio, add your links, pick a theme, and publish in minutes.
If you have ever pasted three different links into an Instagram caption and hoped people would copy the right one, you already know why a single bio link exists. The job is simple. Send everyone to one place that holds everything you want them to see. The harder part is making that place look like you and actually get clicks.
This guide walks through how to make a link in bio page that does both. It takes a few minutes, and you do not need to write any code or open a design tool. By the end you will have a real page at a handle you own, ready to drop into every profile you have.
Step 1: Claim your handle
Your page lives at a clean address like mypage.cc/yourname, so the first move is picking the name. Use the same handle you use on social if it is free. Consistency makes you easier to find and easier to trust.
- Go to get started free and sign in with Google or an email code.
- Type the handle you want and check that it is available.
- Lock it in. That handle is now your page address.
Keep it short and readable. A handle people can say out loud is a handle people can remember.
Step 2: Add your photo, name, and bio
The top of the page is the part everyone sees first, so treat it like a small introduction rather than an afterthought. Upload a clear photo, ideally a real face or a clean logo, since people connect faster with a face than with a wordmark.
Then write three things:
- A display name (your real name or brand name).
- A short headline that says what you do in a few words.
- A bio of one or two sentences that adds context or personality.
If you stare at the blank bio field for too long, the built in AI bio assist can draft a first version from a couple of notes. Edit it so it sounds like you. The goal is clear, not clever.
Step 3: Add your links and blocks
This is the core of how to make a link in bio that works. Instead of a plain stack of buttons, you build the page out of blocks, and each block does a specific job.
Common blocks to add:
- Links for your shop, latest video, booking page, or portfolio.
- Social icons so people can follow you everywhere in one tap.
- Image galleries to show work, products, or moments.
- Video embeds to pull in a recent upload without sending people away.
- Contact buttons for email, calls, or messages.
- Stories for quick, Instagram style updates that keep the page feeling current.
Order matters. Put the one thing you most want people to do at the top. A page with a clear primary action beats a page with twenty equal links. If you want more inspiration on what to include, see our post on link in bio ideas.
Step 4: Pick a theme
A good page does not stop at swapping a button color. Type, spacing, corner radius, and color move together, so switching themes restyles the whole page and nothing breaks. You get the look of a custom site without the weekend of work one costs.
Browse the themes and choose one that fits your work. Dark themes read as premium and look sharp in the in app browsers where most people will open your link. Set an accent color that matches your brand, preview it live, and switch freely until it feels right. Every block you added stays in place no matter which theme you choose.
Step 5: Publish and share the link
Once the page looks right, publish it. Your page goes live at your handle and loads fast because it ships almost no JavaScript, which matters when someone taps through from a phone on a slow connection.
Now put the link to work:
- Paste it into your Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, and LinkedIn bios.
- Add it to your email signature.
- Use it on business cards, flyers, or anywhere a QR code makes sense.
One link, every profile. When you add a new project later, you update the page once and every profile points to the new thing automatically. This is the main reason a designed bio page beats juggling raw URLs, and it is also why many people treat it as a lightweight Linktree alternative.
Tips for a page that converts
A page that gets clicks usually does a few small things right. Lead with one clear action rather than burying it. Keep your link labels specific, so “Book a call” beats “Click here.” Trim anything you would not genuinely want a stranger to tap. Refresh the top block whenever your latest drop or project changes, since a current page signals that you are active.
That is the whole process. Claim a handle, introduce yourself, add the blocks that matter, choose a theme, and publish. You can always come back and edit, because everything autosaves and nothing is permanent. If you want to see how the pieces fit together before you start, take a look at the home page, then build your own.