A Simpler Linktree Alternative for Creators

A focused look at the difference between a broad multi-link platform and a constrained page built around one main destination.

creatorslink-in-biolinktree-alternative

Linktree is designed to give one profile link many possible destinations. That is useful when your audience needs a menu.

It is not the only way to structure a link-in-bio page. If your priority is one storefront, booking page, newsletter, waitlist, or current launch, a constrained page can be a better match for the job.

This is the practical difference between a broad multi-link platform and a simpler Linktree alternative built around one main action.

Start with the destination, not the tool

Before comparing features, write down where you want most visitors to go this month.

If the honest answer is "several places," a multi-link page gives each destination a visible route. Linktree's Free plan supports unlimited links, and its paid plans add wider customization, redirect, analytics, and growth features.

If the answer is one place, your page has a different job. It needs to introduce that destination, make the call to action clear, and leave only a small amount of room for supporting links.

This comparison of current link-in-bio tools shows how the multi-link, creator-suite, and constrained models differ.

What a constrained page means

yesIhaveone is built around one main destination. A creator can also add social icons and up to two extra links, but those elements support the page rather than compete with its primary action.

The setup choices stay deliberately narrow:

  1. Choose your username.
  2. Add one profile image.
  3. Set the main destination and call to action.
  4. Pick from the existing themes and layouts.
  5. Publish.

This is not a visual page builder, storefront, or content hub. The product model assumes those things already live at the destination you choose.

The benefit is less page management

A focused tool gives you fewer blocks, widgets, and page sections to maintain. That can matter when the bio page is only the handoff between a social profile and the place where the real experience happens.

You can still change the main destination as priorities shift. You can schedule a temporary main link, adjust the CTA text, and review click activity without redesigning the whole page.

The constraint also makes the tradeoff clear. If you want unlimited links, built-in selling, email capture, or a multi-page website, choose a product designed for those jobs. If you want one main action with limited supporting context, a smaller model may feel more direct.

Price follows product scope

yesIhaveone costs US$4.99 per month, billed monthly, with no free tier. The plan includes the page themes and layouts, click analytics, scheduling, country controls, optional socials, and up to two supporting links.

That price is not presented as a feature-for-feature substitute for every Linktree tier. The products have different scope. Linktree offers a free multi-link profile and paid plans for creators who want broader customization and growth tools. yesIhaveone charges for a narrower product with one plan.

Linktree plan details were checked on 13 July 2026 using the official Linktree pricing page. It listed a Free plan, Starter at US$8 per month when billed monthly, and Pro at US$15 per month when billed monthly. Annual billing can reduce the effective monthly price, and taxes, features, or plan availability may vary by locale. Pricing can change after the checked date.

Who should choose the simpler model?

A constrained page is worth considering when:

  • one destination drives most of your current activity;
  • you want the main CTA to stay visually dominant;
  • your shop, booking flow, newsletter, or community already lives elsewhere;
  • you prefer a fixed set of themes and layouts to an open-ended builder;
  • two supporting links and social icons are enough context.

If you are new to the category, read why creators use a link-in-bio page before sending people onward. It covers branding, destination changes, and useful click visibility without assuming a specific platform.

The simpler option is not the one with the shortest feature list at any cost. It is the one whose boundaries match the job you need the page to do.