S.EE Blog

What's the Best Link-in-Bio Platform?

A clear look at the top link-in-bio platforms in 2026, what each one does well, where they cost you, and how to pick the right page for your links.

8 min read
What's the Best Link-in-Bio Platform?
What's the Best Link-in-Bio Platform?

Almost every social platform gives you one clickable link. Instagram, TikTok, X, your podcast profile, they all funnel followers toward a single URL, and that one link has to carry a lot of weight. A link-in-bio platform fixes that by putting all your links, content, and contact options on one page behind a single short URL.

The hard part is choosing. There are dozens of these tools, and they're not built the same way. Some are simple link lists, some are full storefronts, and some are part of a wider link management system. So what's the best link-in-bio platform in 2026? The honest answer depends on what you're trying to do, but a handful of options stand out. This guide walks through the top ones, what each does well, and where they fall short.

The idea started out of necessity. For years, platforms limited you to a single link in your profile, so creators had to keep swapping that URL every time they posted something new. Instagram now lets you add a few links to your bio, and you can read the current rules in the Instagram Help Center, but the limit still exists, and most other networks are stricter. TikTok and X, for example, still give you one link.

A link-in-bio page solves this by acting as a hub. You share one short URL across every profile, and that page holds everything else: your latest video, your shop, your newsletter signup, your other socials. Behind the scenes, the better tools also track taps, so you can see which links people care about. With the creator economy now a meaningful part of how people make a living, that tap data is worth paying attention to.

Before comparing tools, it helps to know what separates a decent page from a good one. A few things matter more than the rest:

  • Customization, so the page looks like you and not a template everyone recognizes
  • Analytics, so you can see what's getting clicked
  • Custom domain support, so the page lives on your brand instead of someone else's subdomain
  • Fees, since some platforms take a cut of anything you sell
  • Speed, because a slow page loses taps

With that framing, here's how the main options stack up.

S.EE

S.EE homepage showing its link management platform with URL shortening, QR codes, analytics, and a built-in link-in-bio page

S.EE earns the top spot because its link-in-bio page isn't a bolted-on extra; it runs on the same engine as a full link management platform. The page you build sits alongside URL shortening, analytics, QR codes, and file sharing in one dashboard, so the tap data from your bio page lives next to the click data from every other link you share.

The link-in-bio builder gives you 20+ themes across both list and grid layouts. List themes keep things classic with your links only. Grid themes do something more interesting: connect your accounts and the page pulls in new posts, videos, and repositories from GitHub, Mastodon, X, and RSS as you publish, so it updates itself. You can style each custom link with its own icon and color, reorder everything by drag and drop, and switch on team mode when more than one person manages the page.

Two things set it apart for serious users. First, you can host the page on your own custom domain, which keeps your branding consistent and tends to read as more trustworthy to visitors. Second, S.EE doesn't take a seller fee or transaction cut, which is a real difference from several competitors below. You also get the same link analytics S.EE applies to short links: clicks, countries, cities, devices, browsers, and referrers in real time.

Pricing starts at $5.99/month, and the domain itself, S.EEE, is one of the shortest in the world, so the links you share are about as compact as they get. Signup for S.EE today.

Best for: creators and teams who want a polished bio page that's part of a wider link toolkit, with no fees on what they sell.

Linktree

Linktree homepage with the tagline "A link in bio built for you" on a bright green background

Linktree is the name most people know, with over 50 million users, and that recognition is its real strength. A linktr.ee URL is familiar, and the setup takes minutes. The free plan covers unlimited links with basic click tracking.

The catch shows up in the details. After a price increase in late 2025, paid plans run roughly $8 to $35 per month, and a custom domain isn't available on the lower tiers. More importantly, if you sell anything through the page, Linktree takes a seller fee, around 12% on the free plan and 9% on most paid plans, on top of normal payment processing. For a simple link hub that's fine; for anyone monetizing, those fees add up fast.

Best for: people who want the most recognized name and don't plan to sell through the page.

Beacons

Beacons homepage with the headline "The Link in Bio That Gets You Brand Deals"

Beacons leans hard into creator monetization. Its free plan is generous, with a built-in store, a media kit builder, email tools, and tipping, plus a heavy dose of AI features. Paid plans start around $10 per month and add custom domains and lower fees.

The trade-off is similar to Linktree's. The free tier charges roughly 9% on sales, so the platform pays for itself mainly through what you sell rather than a subscription. If you're running a digital product business and want everything in one place, that model can work. If you just want a clean link page, you're carrying a lot of features you won't touch.

Best for: creators who sell digital products and want a storefront baked in.

Carrd

Carrd homepage showing its minimal one-page website builder with a "Choose a Starting Point" call to action

Carrd isn't strictly a link-in-bio tool; it's a one-page website builder. But it's so cheap and flexible that plenty of people use it for exactly this. The free plan covers up to three sites, and paid plans are billed annually at about $9, $19, and $49 per year, with no transaction fees at all.

The upside is total design control and a price that's hard to beat. The downside is that you build everything yourself, there's no built-in tap analytics on the cheaper tiers without wiring up a third-party tool, and a custom domain needs the $19 plan. It rewards people who like to tinker.

Best for: budget-minded builders who want a custom page and don't mind doing the setup.

Stan Store

Stan Store homepage with the headline "Meet Your All-in-One Creator Store" on a purple background

Stan Store sits at the commerce-heavy end of the spectrum. It pairs a link-in-bio page with a full storefront aimed at creators selling courses, memberships, and digital products. It charges a flat monthly subscription rather than a percentage of sales, which can be cheaper than fee-based tools once your volume is high.

The flip side is that it's built around selling. If you're not running a products business, you're paying for a store you don't need.

Best for: creators whose main goal is selling digital products directly.

So which one should you choose?

Start with what the page is for. If you mostly point people to content, profiles, and a newsletter, you want a clean, fast page with good tap data and your own domain, and you don't want to give up a cut of anything. That's where S.EE fits, especially if you also shorten links, run QR codes, or want everything in one dashboard. The creator-focused setup is built around exactly this mix of bio page plus analytics plus branded links.

If selling digital products is the whole point, Beacons or Stan Store make more sense, since they're built as storefronts first. If you just want the most familiar name and won't monetize, Linktree is a safe default. And if you love building things yourself on a tiny budget, Carrd is tough to beat on price.

One more thing worth checking before you commit: fees. A free plan that takes 9% to 12% of your sales can quietly cost more than a paid plan with no cut, depending on how much you sell. Run that math against your own numbers.

The bottom line

There's no single best link-in-bio platform for everyone, but there is a best one for how you actually share links. If you want a page that looks sharp, loads fast, tracks every tap, lives on your own domain, and never skims a percentage of your sales, S.EE covers all of that and ties it into URL shortening, analytics, QR codes, and file sharing in one place.

If you're looking to simplify how you share and track links, you can build your bio page in a few minutes and see how it fits. Sign up today or view pricing to find the plan that matches your needs.

Frequently asked questions

It's a single landing page that holds all your links behind one short, branded URL. You share that one link in your social profiles, and visitors tap through to whatever you want them to see: your latest content, your shop, your other accounts, or a signup form.

For basic use, often yes. The thing to watch is fees, not the monthly price. Several free plans take 9% to 12% of anything you sell, so if you monetize through the page, a paid plan with no seller fee can work out cheaper. If you only point people to content, a free or low-cost plan is usually fine.

Yes, on most paid plans. A custom domain keeps your branding consistent and tends to read as more trustworthy than a shared subdomain. S.EE supports custom domains, and you can set one up from the same dashboard you use for your short links.

The better ones do. You'll typically see taps per link, along with locations, devices, and referrers. That data tells you which links actually matter to your audience so you can prioritize them, which is the main reason a dedicated tool beats listing links in your bio by hand.

Fewer than you'd think. A short, focused list usually converts better than a long one, because every extra option splits attention. Lead with whatever you most want people to do, keep the page scannable, and use your tap analytics to prune links that no one clicks.