7 Best Free Linktree Alternatives (2026)

TLTeam Link Studio
Jun 9, 2026

Looking for a free Linktree alternative usually comes down to one frustration: the free tier feels limited, the page looks like everyone else's, or you want your own domain without upgrading. Linktree is fine, but it's not the only option, and several tools give you more on their free plans. Here's an honest comparison of seven alternatives in 2026, what each does best, and how to pick.

A note on "free": almost every tool reserves its best features — custom domains, advanced analytics, removing branding — for paid plans. The real question is what you get without paying and how far that takes you.

What to compare

Before the list, the four things that actually differ between these tools:

  • Custom domain — can you use yourname.com instead of tool.com/yourname, and is it free or paid?
  • Branded design — how much can you change colors, fonts, and layout so the page looks like you, not the tool?
  • Analytics — do you see which links get clicked, and is that included free?
  • Watermark / branding — does the tool stamp its name on your free page?

Keep these in mind as you read; they're where the tools separate.

The 7 alternatives

1. Link Studio

A drag-and-drop page builder aimed at people who want a bio page that doesn't look templated. The editor gives you real control over layout, colors, and blocks rather than a fixed list of buttons, and it supports custom domains and visitor tracking. Best for creators and small businesses that want a branded page they can grow into, not just a link list. If looking distinct from every other Linktree page matters to you, start here.

2. Beacons

Popular with creators, with a feature-heavy free tier and a focus on monetization and media kits. The design is more flexible than Linktree's. Good if you want lots of built-in creator tools in one place, though the breadth can feel like a lot if you just want a clean page.

3. Carrd

A favorite for simple one-page sites. Extremely cheap and flexible for building a custom landing page, and the free tier covers basic pages. It's less of a purpose-built "link in bio" tool and more a general one-page builder, so you'll do more manual setup — great for tinkerers, more work for everyone else.

4. Bio.link

A straightforward, genuinely free bio page with a clean interface and a generous free plan. Light on advanced design and analytics, but a solid pick if you want something simple and fast with minimal fuss.

5. Hopp (by Wix)

Wix's bio-link product, with a polished mobile-first design and tie-ins to the wider Wix ecosystem. A reasonable choice if you already use Wix or want app-style polish, though some capabilities pull you toward the broader paid platform.

6. Linktree (free tier)

Worth including as the baseline. The free plan is reliable and quick to set up, but it limits design control, keeps a custom domain behind a paid plan, and shows Linktree branding. Fine if you want zero setup and don't mind looking like the default.

7. Your own simple site

Not a product, but worth naming: a basic page on a host like GitHub Pages or a static site is free and fully yours. It demands technical comfort and gives you no built-in analytics or editor, so it's only "free" if your time is free. Best for developers who'd rather own every detail.

How to choose

Match the tool to what you care about most:

  • Want a branded page that doesn't look templated → a real page builder like Link Studio gives you the most design control.
  • Want maximum built-in creator features → Beacons.
  • Want the cheapest flexible one-pager and don't mind setup → Carrd.
  • Want dead-simple and free → Bio.link.
  • Already in the Wix world → Hopp.
  • Want zero setup and don't care about looking unique → Linktree's free tier.
  • You're technical and want total ownership → your own static site.

The honest rule: if your bio page is a core part of your brand, prioritize design control and a custom domain. If it's a throwaway link list, the simplest free option is fine.

Before you switch

Two practical tips when moving from Linktree:

  • Keep the same destination URL where you can. If your Instagram and TikTok bios already point somewhere, using a custom domain means you can change tools later without ever editing your profiles again — the domain stays, only what it points to changes. This is exactly why a custom domain is worth setting up early; Google's guidance on changing site addresses shows how much friction a stable domain saves down the line.
  • Rebuild, don't copy. Switching tools is a good moment to cut dead links and reorder by priority rather than recreating an old, cluttered page.

Pick based on how much the page matters to your brand, not just on which free tier looks biggest on a comparison chart.

Link Studio gives you a drag-and-drop builder, custom domain support, and visitor tracking so your bio page looks like your brand instead of a template. Try it free at linkstudio.dev and see how a branded page compares.