How to Clone a Page on UniLink (Duplicate Any Page in One Click)

By UniLink May 02, 2026 10 min read
How to Clone a Page on UniLink (Duplicate Any Page in One Click)


How to Clone a Page on UniLink (Duplicate Any Page in One Click)

Cloning a page copies every block, setting, and design element so you can create a new version without rebuilding from scratch.

  • Clone any page from the Pages list: three-dot menu → Duplicate → rename → edit the clone.
  • The cloned page is unpublished by default — it never goes live until you manually publish it.
  • Cloning is ideal for A/B testing, seasonal variations, and agency template workflows.

Building a page layout that works well — one with the right block order, correct branding, and conversion-focused copy — takes real effort. Cloning lets you protect that work by duplicating it before experimenting. Whether you are running an A/B test on two different CTAs, spinning up a campaign variation, or creating a client page from a proven template, the Duplicate feature in UniLink gives you a full copy in one click so you never have to start from a blank canvas again.

What Page Cloning Does

Cloning a page in UniLink creates an exact copy of the source page including every block, its content, order, and individual settings; all design customizations such as colors, fonts, and spacing; page-level settings like the page name, description, and cover image; and any active integrations or tracking pixels attached to the page. The clone is fully independent from the original — changes to the clone do not affect the source, and vice versa.

The cloned page is always created in Draft (unpublished) status regardless of whether the source page was live. This is intentional. A draft clone never goes live accidentally, giving you time to rename it, edit the content, and review it before publishing. If you clone a published page and immediately publish the clone under a different slug, both pages coexist as separate live pages with separate URLs and separate analytics.

Media files — images, videos, and uploaded assets — are referenced rather than duplicated. Both the original page and the clone point to the same underlying file in your media library. This keeps storage usage low and means that if you update an image in the library, it updates on both pages. If you want the clone to use different media, replace the image in the clone's blocks specifically — this does not affect the original.

How to Get Started

  1. Open your dashboard — log in at app.unilink.us and click Pages in the left sidebar to see your list of pages.
  2. Find the page to clone — locate the source page you want to duplicate. This can be any page — published, draft, or archived.
  3. Open the three-dot menu — click the icon on the right side of the page's row to open the page action menu.
  4. Click Duplicate — select Duplicate from the menu. UniLink immediately creates a copy named "Copy of [Original Page Name]" and places it at the bottom of your page list as a Draft.
  5. Rename the clone — click on the cloned page to open it. Go to Page Settings → Name and give it a descriptive name. The URL slug is auto-generated from the name — update it too if needed before publishing.

How to Use the Clone Feature

  1. Edit the clone independently — open the cloned page in the editor and make your changes. Modify copy, swap images, rearrange blocks, or update CTAs. None of these changes affect the original page.
  2. Set a unique URL slug — before publishing, go to Page Settings → URL and set a slug that reflects the clone's purpose (e.g., /summer-sale-v2 or /client-name-template). Two pages cannot share the same slug.
  3. Run an A/B test — publish both the original and the cloned page under different slugs. Share each URL with a segment of your audience and compare analytics after 7–14 days to determine which version performs better.
  4. Use a clone as a template for future pages — keep a well-designed page archived specifically as a template master. Each time you need a new page, clone the template, rename it, and edit only the content — the layout and design are already done.
  5. Archive the losing variant after testing — once your A/B test concludes, archive the lower-performing page rather than deleting it. The test data stays accessible in the archive for future reference.

Key Settings

SettingWhat It DoesRecommended
Clone Status Cloned pages are always created as Draft — never published automatically Review and rename before publishing to avoid confusion with the source page
URL Slug The clone inherits the source slug with a suffix (e.g., -copy) — must be changed before publishing Set a meaningful slug immediately after cloning to keep your URL structure clean
Page Name Auto-named "Copy of [Source Name]" — visible only in the dashboard, not to visitors Rename to reflect the clone's purpose (e.g., "Summer 2025 — Variant B")
Media References Clone shares media library files with the original — not separate copies Replace images in the clone's blocks if you need locale or variant-specific media
Tracking Pixels Page-level integrations and tracking pixels are copied to the clone Review and update analytics/pixel settings on the clone if it is for a different campaign
Tip: Keep one page in your account permanently in Draft as a "master template" — never publish it. Clone from this master whenever you need a new page. This way you always have a clean, on-brand starting point regardless of changes made to your live pages over time.

Get the Most Out Of Page Cloning

A/B testing is the highest-leverage use of page cloning. Instead of guessing which headline, button color, or block order converts better, clone your current page, change one variable on the clone, publish both under different URLs, and split traffic between them. After collecting enough data — typically 7 to 14 days with consistent traffic — your analytics clearly show which version drives more clicks, sign-ups, or purchases. Iterate on the winner for the next test cycle. This systematic approach compounds over time into significantly better conversion rates than intuition alone.

For creators who manage seasonal content, page cloning creates a reliable production rhythm. Clone your primary page at the start of each campaign season, rename it with the season and year (e.g., "Holiday 2025"), update the clone's content for the new campaign, and publish it when the campaign launches. Your original page stays live throughout, and you have a ready-to-go seasonal variant with your full block structure already in place. When the season ends, archive the clone — and next year, clone that archived version rather than starting over.

Agencies using UniLink's Business plan get the most productivity leverage from cloning. Build a polished, fully designed page for your first client in a given niche — a fitness coach, a musician, a consultant. That page represents hours of design work. For the next client in the same niche, clone it, swap the branding, update the copy, and you have delivered a professional page in a fraction of the original time. Over time, build a library of niche-specific templates by keeping archived clones of your best work.

Cloning is also the safest way to make major structural changes to an already-published page. Instead of editing the live page and risking breaking something visible to visitors, clone it first. Experiment freely on the clone — restructure blocks, test a new design system, try a different layout entirely. If the experiment works, you can redirect your main slug to the new version. If it does not, simply archive the clone with zero impact on your live page.

Troubleshooting

ProblemCauseFix
Duplicate option not appearing in the three-dot menu Page count limit reached on current plan — free plan allows up to 3 pages total including drafts Delete or archive an existing page to free a slot, or upgrade your plan for more pages
Clone published under the same URL as the original URL slug was not updated before publishing — UniLink appended -copy but it was published without changing it Go to Page Settings on the clone, update the slug to something unique, and republish
Images on the clone are broken after editing the media library Both pages share the same media reference — deleting or replacing the image in the library affects both Upload a separate copy of the image to the media library and relink it on the affected page
Analytics for the clone appear mixed with the original Tracking pixels copied from the original may be sending data to the same analytics destination Update the pixel or analytics settings on the clone to point to a separate tracking property for the test
  • One-click duplication copies all blocks, content, and design settings instantly
  • Clone is always a Draft — never risks going live accidentally
  • Perfect foundation for A/B testing, seasonal campaigns, and agency template workflows
  • Shared media references keep storage usage low when cloning media-heavy pages
  • Free plan page limit means you may need to delete content before cloning
  • URL slug must be manually updated before publishing — easy to forget
  • Shared media means library changes affect both original and clone simultaneously

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pages can I clone?

You can clone as many pages as your plan's page limit allows. Free accounts can have up to 3 pages total. Starter ($9/mo) supports up to 10 pages. Pro ($19/mo) supports up to 25 pages. Business ($49/mo) has unlimited pages.

Can I clone a page from another account?

No. Cloning only works within the same account. However, if you are an agency on a Business plan, you can clone a page and share the resulting template with a client by transferring it to their account via the Team collaboration feature.

Does the clone inherit the original page's SEO settings?

Yes. The clone copies the original's meta title, description, and Open Graph settings. Update these in Page Settings → SEO on the clone before publishing to give the new page its own unique SEO identity and avoid duplicate content issues.

Can I clone a page and publish it under a custom domain?

Yes. After cloning, assign a custom domain to the clone via Page Settings → Domain (available on Pro and Business plans). The custom domain can point to any page in your account, including clones.

Will the clone's analytics start fresh or carry over the original's data?

Analytics start fresh from zero for the clone. The original page retains all of its historical data. Each page tracks independently from the moment it is published.

  • Cloning copies all blocks, settings, and design — the clone is fully independent from the original.
  • Cloned pages are always created as Drafts — they never go live until you explicitly publish them.
  • Update the URL slug and page name immediately after cloning to avoid confusion.
  • Media files are shared between original and clone — replace images in the clone if you need variant-specific media.
  • Use a permanent draft "master template" page as your cloning source for consistent, on-brand new pages.

Stop rebuilding from scratch — clone your best-performing page and iterate from there. Log in to app.unilink.us, open your Pages list, and hit Duplicate on any page to get started in one click. Upgrade to Pro or Business for unlimited pages and no cloning limits.

Create Your Free Link-in-Bio Page

Join thousands of creators using UniLink. 40+ blocks, analytics, e-commerce, and AI tools — all free.

Get Started Free