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Link in Bio for Pinterest
A link in bio for Pinterest turns pins into traffic. Send savers to your shop, blog, and gallery from one fast, designed page that loads instantly on mobile.
Pinterest is a search engine that looks like a mood board. People come to plan, to save, and to buy later, which makes the traffic some of the most intent-driven on the internet. But Pinterest sends that traffic in a frustrating shape. A pin can keep working for months, quietly driving people to your profile, and almost all of them have one place to go next: the link on your Pinterest profile. A good link in bio for Pinterest decides whether all those savers and searchers become readers and customers, or just bounce.
The trouble is that a single profile link cannot point to your shop, your blog, your newsletter, and your latest pin all at once. So most people point it at a homepage and lose the rest. A focused link in bio page solves that by giving every destination a clear path from one link.
Why a Designed Page Fits Pinterest
Pinterest is visual to its core. People scroll it for aesthetics, for ideas, for things that look good. When your profile link opens a stack of plain grey buttons, the contrast is jarring. You spent effort making beautiful pins, then sent people to something that looks like a settings menu.
A designed page keeps the experience consistent. With more than 60 premium themes, each a full design system of color, type, and spacing, your page can carry the same mood as your boards. And because pages on mypage.cc ship near-zero JavaScript, they load almost instantly on a phone, which is where nearly every Pinterest tap happens. The visitor stays in the visual flow you created instead of waiting on a slow page.
Link Your Pinterest Profile, Then Route Outward
Your link in bio works in both directions. New visitors who find you elsewhere should be able to reach your Pinterest profile, and Pinterest visitors should be able to reach everything else. Add your Pinterest profile to the social icons row so anyone landing from another platform can go follow your boards in one tap.
Then build the outward routes for people arriving from Pinterest:
- Your shop. If you sell, lead with it. Link out to your products on Shopify, Etsy, or Gumroad, since mypage links out rather than processing payments, so your checkout stays where it already works.
- Your blog. Pinterest savers are planners and readers. Give them a clear path to your latest posts.
- Your newsletter. The savers who are not ready to buy or read today are worth keeping. A signup turns them into an audience you own.
Show a Gallery That Matches the Vibe
Pinterest people respond to images, so meet them with images. An image gallery block lets you show your best work, products, or recipes in a clean grid, each one linking out to where it lives. This is the visual bridge between a pin they liked and the thing they came to find.
Lead the gallery with whatever is most current or most popular. Because everything on the page is reversible and saves as you go, you can swap the featured row whenever a new pin starts taking off, keeping the page in sync with what is actually driving your Pinterest traffic.
Keep Your Blog Feed Auto-Updating
If you publish regularly, the worst thing your link in bio can do is go stale. A frozen list of three-month-old links tells a returning visitor there is nothing new. An auto-updating feed fixes this by pulling your latest blog posts onto the page automatically, so the page stays current without you touching it.
This matters more on Pinterest than almost anywhere, because pins keep working long after you post them. Someone might find a pin you made last spring and land on your page today. An auto-updating feed makes sure they see your newest work, not a snapshot from when the pin went up. Add Instagram-style stories on top of that to highlight a seasonal collection or a fresh post, and returning visitors always have a reason to look again.
Capture Interest Before They Drift
Pinterest browsing is often a slow burn. People save now and act weeks later. That gap is your opportunity, if you can keep a line open. On Pro, lead-capture forms let visitors leave their email right on the page, so a saver who loves your aesthetic but is not buying today becomes someone you can reach when the next collection drops. For more on turning that attention into income, the how to make money from your link in bio post covers the options, from a built-in tip jar to routing sales out to your store.
Start Free, Grow When It Pays
Begin on the free tier. It carries a small “Made with mypage” badge and gives you the themes, the gallery, the auto-updating feed, and a page that loads fast. When your Pinterest traffic earns it, Pro adds a custom domain so the page sits on your own brand, lead-capture forms, and analytics that show which destinations your savers actually tap.
Pinterest will keep sending you patient, high-intent visitors for months after each pin. Make sure the page on the other end of your profile link is fast, beautiful, and current, so those savers become readers and customers instead of a number you never see.
Claim your page at mypage.cc/yourname. It is free, and you can be live in about two minutes.