Link in Bio Button Text That Converts: 30 Examples by Use Case

- Button text is the single most-important variable on a bio-link page after position. Specific, verb-first, benefit-driven labels outperform generic ones by 30-50%.
- The framework: verb + benefit + specificity. "Get the free morning routine guide" beats "Free download" beats "Resources".
- Below: 30 button-text examples across 10 creator types ??” copy, adapt, paste.
The Button Text Framework
Three elements separate high-CTR button text from generic labels:
- Verb. Tell visitors what action they're taking ??” "Get", "Watch", "Listen", "Read", "Join", "Buy", "Try", "Book".
- Benefit. Tell them what they receive ??” "the free guide", "the new song", "behind-the-scenes content".
- Specificity. Tell them exactly which one ??” "episode 47", "this week's recipe", "the morning routine".
Combine all three: "Watch the morning routine video" beats "Watch video" beats "Video".
30 Button Text Examples
For musicians (3)
- "Listen to the new single on Spotify"
- "Pre-save the album dropping Friday"
- "Buy tickets to the spring tour"
For YouTubers (3)
- "Watch the new video"
- "Get the free production checklist (PDF)"
- "Subscribe ??” 50K already did"
For TikTokers (3)
- "Get the recipe from yesterday's video"
- "Shop the outfit"
- "Join 100K on Instagram"
For coaches (3)
- "Book a 30-min strategy call"
- "Take the free 7-day mini-course"
- "Apply for the 12-week program"
For online course creators (3)
- "Start the free preview lesson"
- "Get the course (50% off until Friday)"
- "Read the case studies"
For authors (3)
- "Read chapter 1 free"
- "Buy the new book on Amazon"
- "Get monthly book recs (newsletter)"
For podcasters (3)
- "Listen to episode 47 ??” interview with Sarah Park"
- "Subscribe on Apple Podcasts"
- "Support the show on Patreon"
For photographers (3)
- "See the latest wedding album"
- "Book a 2026 session"
- "Get my Lightroom presets"
For indie makers (3)
- "Try the app free for 14 days"
- "Read the launch story on Product Hunt"
- "Subscribe ??” weekly build-in-public updates"
For restaurants (3)
- "Reserve a table tonight"
- "Order delivery via Uber Eats"
- "See this week's specials"
Button Text Patterns That Work
| Pattern | Example |
|---|---|
| Verb + benefit | Get the free template |
| Verb + specific item | Watch the morning routine video |
| Verb + time framing | Listen to episode 47 |
| Verb + price framing | Pre-order at $19 (was $29) |
| Verb + audience size | Join 12,000 subscribers |
| Verb + urgency | Apply before Friday |
| Direct outcome | Save 3 hours a week with my templates |
| Quantified value | Read 100+ free essays |
Words to Avoid in Button Text
- "Click here", "Tap here" ??” visitors know what to do.
- "Learn more" ??” vague. Replace with specific action.
- "Submit" ??” bureaucratic. Use "Get", "Send", "Subscribe".
- "Continue" ??” implies you're already in a flow. Bio link visitors aren't.
- "More info" ??” passive. Tell them the info they'll get.
- "Resources" ??” too generic. Be specific: "Get the free guide".
- "Hub", "Page", "Link" ??” these describe the page itself, not what visitors get.
Length Guidelines
| Length | When to use |
|---|---|
| 1 word | Brand-name destinations only ("Spotify", "Amazon"). Usually too short. |
| 2 words | Strong verb + noun ("Buy book"). Compact but works. |
| 3-5 words | Sweet spot for most CTAs. |
| 6-8 words | For specific or descriptive CTAs ("Get the morning routine free PDF"). |
| 9+ words | Usually too long. Trim to 5-7 unless the specificity is essential. |
Emoji Guidelines
- None ??” fine for professional / B2B audiences.
- One ??” works for most creator audiences. Place at start or end, not middle.
- Two+ ??” risky. Looks spammy. Reserve for play-pretend casual brands.
Match emoji to button intent: ?–¶??? for video, ???µ for music, ??“– for reading, ??’» for software, ???? for free offers.
FAQ
What's the best button text for a Linktree?
Verb + benefit + specificity. "Watch the new video" beats "YouTube". "Get the free template" beats "Free download".
Should every button have a verb?
Yes. Verb-first labels consistently outperform noun-only labels.
How many words should a bio link button have?
3-5 words is the sweet spot for most CTAs. Trim longer; expand 1-2 word labels if too generic.
Should I use emoji on bio link buttons?
One per button at most. None is fine for B2B; one matches creator audiences. Two+ looks spammy.
How often should I update button text?
The top button updates weekly to match latest social content. Other buttons rotate monthly based on click data.
What button text drives the most clicks?
Specific, benefit-driven, urgency-framed labels. "Pre-order before Friday ??” 30% off" outperforms "Buy now" by 30-50% in most tests.
- Best button text follows the formula: verb + benefit + specificity.
- 3-5 words is the sweet spot. Avoid "click here", "learn more", "resources".
- Match emoji and tone to your audience ??” one emoji max per button.
- Update top button weekly; rotate others monthly based on click data.
Pre-built button copy templates
UniLink ships button text templates by use case (course, podcast, store, newsletter) ??” drag, drop, edit. Free plan includes all templates.
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