Link-in-Bio Bento Grid Layout
Arrange your links, socials, and content in a beautiful grid layout, not just a vertical list.
Free to build. $1.99 once for a custom URL.
Most link-in-bio tools give you a vertical list. Scroll down, click a link, done. It works, but it's boring. Every page looks the same because every page is the same.
Bento grids let you arrange your content in a visual grid inspired by Japanese bento boxes. Links next to images. Social profiles next to a quote. A stat counter next to your portfolio link. Tiles of different sizes, arranged however makes sense for what you do.
How the bento grid layout works on a link-in-bio page
Each tile is independently sized: small, medium, large, or full-width. Drag to reorder. The grid adapts to any screen, so mobile readers see a single column and desktop visitors see the mosaic.
The same flexibility helps Spotify artists put album art next to a row of DSP buttons, Twitch streamers put Discord and merch in the largest tiles where viewers tap, Etsy sellers give a launch listing the hero tile, and YouTube creators feature a thumbnail-style tile for the latest upload.
What goes in each tile
Every tile holds one thing: a link, an image, a social profile icon, a quote, a stat counter, a map, a heading, or a divider. Mixing them is what turns the page into a one-page portfolio instead of a list of buttons. A quote tile pulling a five-star review reads as social proof. The hero photo as a large tile does most of the visual work, with a stat counter (follower count, number of projects shipped, whatever) sitting alongside.
See the full set on the content types page.
Where bento grids came from
The pattern was popularized by bento.me, which pioneered this layout for link-in-bio pages before getting acquired and shut down. lnk.boo carries the idea forward with polished themes on top. Your page ends up looking like something you designed on purpose.
Free to build. $1.99 once for a custom URL.