Every platform in your funnel eventually points to one place: a link page that sends fans to your OnlyFans. Get it right and it quietly lifts conversion across every channel you run. Get it wrong, with a raw adult link or a flagged tool, and you can lose traffic or an account overnight. Here is how to build one that is both safe and high-converting.
What is a link-in-bio, and why do you need one?
A link-in-bio is a single landing page that aggregates all your links into one URL you share on your social profiles. For a creator, it is the bridge between social media and your paid page. It matters for four reasons:
- One-link limits. Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat allow only one bio link, so a hub lets one URL lead everywhere.
- Safety. Platforms flag direct links to adult domains. A neutral page reads as clean, so your bio is not pointing at an adult site.
- Tracking. A hub shows you how many people click through, and paired with OnlyFans tracking links, how many actually subscribe.
- Ownership. You can add an email capture step before the OnlyFans link and build a list you own, which survives any platform action.
A well-designed page also simply converts better than a raw URL, and that difference compounds across every traffic source you have.
Which link-in-bio tool should you use?
The most important thing is to use an adult-friendly tool so your page is never at risk of being flagged.
- AllMyLinks is purpose-built for adult creators. It explicitly allows adult content, has no real history of banning creators, and is free and reliable. It is the safest, lowest-stress choice.
- Beacons is an all-in-one creator platform that allows adult content with a content warning and adds analytics, email capture, selling tools, and a custom domain. The free tier is generous.
- Linktree is the most recognized brand, which can slightly raise click trust. Its terms allow creator-sold adult content marked as sensitive, but enforcement has been inconsistent and some adult creators report being flagged, so use it knowingly.
- Others worth a look include Hoo.be for visual impact and Direct.me or Stan Store for selling features.
Tool policies change, so confirm the current terms before you commit your whole funnel to one.
How do you design a hub that converts?
- Keep it clean and neutral. Avoid explicit language on the page itself. Phrases like "exclusive content" or "VIP" keep it safe from the platforms scanning your bio link.
- Make the OnlyFans button obvious. Give it a prominent spot and an enticing label, and do not bury it under ten other links. Fewer choices convert better.
- Add an email capture step. Someone who does not subscribe today might next week if you can reach them, and an email list is the one audience no platform can take from you.
- Use tracking links. Tag the OnlyFans link so you can see which platform and which page version actually drive subscribers.
- Open in a real browser. In-app browsers on Instagram and TikTok can hurt conversion, so favor tools and links that open in Safari or Chrome.
How does the hub fit your funnel?
Every platform points to the same hub, and the hub points to your page. That structure has a hidden benefit: if a platform changes its rules, you update the hub instead of touching your bios, and you can A/B test page descriptions without editing any profile. Treat the page as a real conversion step, not an afterthought, and revisit it as you learn what your different platforms respond to.
Building, tracking, and continually optimizing this hub across every channel is the kind of detail a management team handles so nothing leaks traffic. At TopStar MGMT, the link funnel is built and tested as part of running the whole operation.
The bottom line
Your link-in-bio is the hinge of the entire funnel. Use an adult-friendly tool like AllMyLinks or Beacons, keep the page clean and neutral, make the OnlyFans button prominent, capture emails, and track what converts. It is a small piece of setup that quietly raises the return on every other thing you do.




