Link in Bio Tools

Linkfire

Smart links for music promo, built for labels and artists.

Visit linkfire.comFree tier available. Paid plans start at $10/mo.Founded 2014

Linkfire is a music marketing platform that generates smart links routing listeners to their preferred streaming service (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, and others). It is widely used by labels, managers, and independent artists to promote releases. Linkfire also offers a bio link product, but its core strength is per-release smart links with detailed analytics.

Our take

Linkfire is the right tool for releasing music. It is the wrong tool for being a general creator. If you release songs, its smart links earn their keep. If you just want a bio page with Spotify links, a dedicated music-friendly bio tool like Linktree or Beacons is cheaper.

Pros

  • The standard tool for music smart links
  • Pre-save campaigns move real numbers on release day
  • Analytics tie directly to streaming platform performance
  • Trusted by major and indie labels

Cons

  • Expensive if you only need a bio link
  • UI is more complex than a dedicated bio link tool
  • Feature set is irrelevant outside music
  • Bio link module is a secondary feature

Features

  • Smart links routing to streaming service of choice
  • Pre-save and pre-add campaigns for upcoming releases
  • Detailed per-DSP analytics
  • Bio link page with release-aware links
  • Audience retargeting pixels
  • A/B testing on landing pages
  • Artist and label account hierarchies

Pricing

Free tier offers a limited number of smart links with basic analytics. Artist plan at $10/mo unlocks more links and bio pages. Team plan at $35/mo adds collaboration features. Label and enterprise plans are quote-based. Pricing skews toward per-release usage rather than single bio page.

Best for

Musicians, labels, and music marketers who need per-release smart links with conversion tracking. The bio link is a bonus, not the product.

Not for

Non-music creators. Linkfire's pricing and feature set assume you have releases to promote; a general creator would overpay for capabilities they don't use.