A traditional link-in-bio page sends visitors somewhere else: one button to a store, another to a booking tool and another to a tip jar. A link-in-bio store removes those extra jumps. The visitor opens one mobile page, sees what you sell, chooses a product or service and reaches checkout from the same profile.
That shorter path matters when someone arrives from Instagram, TikTok, YouTube or another fast-moving feed. They may be interested now but unwilling to navigate several tools, repeat their details or work out which link contains the offer they just saw.
This guide explains how to build a link-in-bio store that accepts payments, what to sell, how to handle automatic digital delivery and how to keep the page focused enough to convert social attention into an order.
Key Takeaways
- A link-in-bio store combines profile, product display and checkout behind one mobile URL
- Sell downloads, services, bookings, memberships or physical products without a separate website
- Match the first products on the page to the content currently driving profile visits
- Offer PayPal, cards and relevant local methods instead of forcing one provider
- Automate file delivery for digital products after verified payment
- Use payrequest.me Product mode when selling is the primary job; use Amount Buttons or Donations for support
What Is a Link-in-Bio Store?
A link-in-bio store is a mobile storefront reached from a social profile URL. Unlike a basic list of external links, it contains real products or services with images, descriptions and prices. The visitor can move directly from the profile page to checkout.
The store does not need to replace every website. It is a focused sales destination for traffic coming from short-form video, social posts, creator profiles and direct messages.
A payrequest.me page can combine a product showcase with your branding, social links and multiple payment providers. You update the products behind one permanent handle rather than replacing the link in every bio.
Link List vs Link-in-Bio Store
| Basic link list | Link-in-bio store |
|---|---|
| Sends visitors to separate destinations | Shows products and payment actions directly |
| Each button adds another page load | Product-to-checkout path stays short |
| Store, booking and tips live in different tools | Offers can share one branded page |
| Link labels must explain where to go | Product image, price and description give context |
| Often optimized for clicks | Optimized for purchases and payments |
A link list is useful when the goal is navigation. A store is better when the goal is selling.
What Can You Sell From a Bio Store?
Common offers include:
- Ebooks, guides and PDFs
- Templates, presets and design assets
- Music, audio packs and videos
- Software and downloadable files
- Consulting or coaching calls
- Creative commissions
- Bookings and appointments
- Memberships and recurring access
- Merchandise and physical products
- Event tickets or workshops
Start with a small catalog. A social visitor should not have to search through dozens of unrelated products to find the item mentioned in the post they just watched.
Step 1: Choose the Store's Main Job
Decide what action matters most:
- Buy a product
- Book a service
- Join a membership
- Send a tip
- Support a fundraising goal
- Contact or follow you elsewhere
If selling products is primary, use Product mode. If the page mainly collects flexible payments, Amount Buttons are clearer. If progress toward a public target matters, use Donation mode.
Trying to make every action equally prominent weakens the page. Lead with the commercial action that matches the content sending visitors there.
Step 2: Claim a Permanent Handle
Choose a short payrequest.me handle that matches your creator or business identity. Use the same name people already recognize from your social profiles.
A permanent handle lets you change products and campaigns without editing the link across Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, newsletters and old posts. Avoid a campaign-specific handle that becomes confusing after the promotion ends.
Step 3: Add Branding and Social Proof
Add your logo or profile image, brand colors and a concise description. The visitor should recognize that the page belongs to the account they just left.
Useful trust details include:
- The same name and image used on the social account
- A one-sentence description of what you make or offer
- Accurate product images
- Clear delivery or booking information
- Support contact
- Links back to your main social profiles
Do not fill the first screen with a biography. The visitor came to act on an offer, so keep products and payment choices close.
Step 4: Build Product Cards That Sell Clearly
Each product needs:
- A literal name
- A useful image or preview
- The exact price and currency
- A short description of what is included
- What happens after payment
For a digital download, state that access appears after confirmed payment. For a booking, explain how the time is selected or confirmed. For a physical product, state important shipping limits before checkout.
Avoid vague labels such as "My Guide" or "Premium Package" without explaining the result.
Step 5: Connect Payment Methods
Social audiences can be international. PayPal may be familiar to one buyer, while another expects a card wallet or local bank method.
PayRequest can combine methods from connected PayPal, Stripe and Mollie accounts. Depending on market and eligibility, the page can offer:
- PayPal
- Credit and debit cards
- Apple Pay and Google Pay
- iDEAL
- Bancontact
- SEPA
- Klarna
- Crypto
The buyer chooses a method while products, customers and orders stay in one PayRequest workflow.
Step 6: Automate Digital Delivery
If you sell a file, do not promise instant access and then email it manually. Connect the paid order to protected delivery.
The system should:
- Wait for the provider to confirm payment
- Mark the correct order paid
- Unlock the correct file
- Show and email protected access
- Record the delivery against the buyer
Read How to Sell Digital Downloads With PayPal for the complete verification and delivery workflow.
Step 7: Put the Store in Every Relevant Bio
Use the same URL across profiles so buyers learn one destination. Add it to:
- Instagram bio
- TikTok profile
- YouTube channel and video descriptions
- X or Threads profile
- Twitch panels
- Newsletter footer
- Messaging profile
- QR codes at events or on packaging
When a post promotes one product, put that product first on the page during the campaign. The permanent URL stays the same while the store order changes.
Reduce the Bio-to-Checkout Steps
Count every action between the social post and payment. A weak flow might be:
- Open bio
- Open a link list
- Choose an external store
- Search for the product
- Open the product
- Start checkout
A focused store removes the external-store and search steps. The visitor opens the bio page, sees the promoted item and starts checkout.
Do not add intermediate buttons merely to make the page look fuller. Each step should help the visitor identify, evaluate or buy the offer.
Link-in-Bio Store vs Marketplace
A marketplace may provide discovery but also controls ranking, fees and customer context. A bio store receives traffic from the audience you already built and gives that audience a direct branded destination.
PayRequest can also list eligible products in its shared Marketplace, but the payrequest.me page remains your direct link. Use the marketplace for additional discovery and the bio store for traffic you generate yourself.
What to Measure
Track the funnel rather than follower count alone:
- Profile visits
- Bio-link opens
- Product views
- Checkout starts
- Successful payments
- Conversion rate by product
- Average order value
- Refunds or support requests
If many people open the page but few select a product, improve the offer order and product cards. If buyers start checkout but do not pay, review payment methods, trust and mobile friction.
Common Link-in-Bio Store Mistakes
- Listing too many unrelated products
- Sending every button to another platform
- Hiding prices until late in checkout
- Using branding that does not match the social profile
- Offering only one payment method to an international audience
- Manually delivering products advertised as instant
- Leaving an expired campaign at the top
- Treating social links as more important than the product
The page should feel like a small, organized store rather than a directory of everything you have ever published.
How Much Does a payrequest.me Store Cost?
Every page, product and payment-page feature is included on PayRequest's Free plan. PayRequest charges 2% per successful payment, capped at EUR 25, in addition to the processing fee from the connected provider the customer chooses.
There is no monthly PayRequest charge required to claim the handle or build the store. Review PayRequest pricing for current details.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. A hosted bio store works from a normal profile link. Availability of native social-commerce features does not affect the external page.
Yes. Use the same permanent payrequest.me URL across profiles and update the products behind it.
Yes. Connect PayPal and optionally Stripe or Mollie so buyers can choose PayPal, cards and eligible local methods.
Yes. List packaged services, calls, bookings or commissions alongside digital and physical products when they serve the same audience.
It depends on the job. A link-list tool is useful for routing visitors to many sites. A payrequest.me store is stronger when products, payments, tips or fundraising should happen directly from the page.
Build Your Link-in-Bio Store
Choose one permanent handle, lead with the products your current content promotes and keep the path from product to payment short. Add other links only after the buying experience is clear.
Claim your payrequest.me page and add it to every profile, or compare the workflow with a Linktree alternative that accepts payments.
