Larder vs Linktree for recipe creators

Linktree is the default link-in-bio tool for most creators. It's fine for what it is - a list of links. But if your content is recipes, it makes your followers do extra work: tap your bio link, tap a recipe link, leave for some other site, find the recipe somewhere on a page covered in ads. Larder collapses that into one tap. Your followers land directly on your cookbook, all your recipes are right there, and they can scale, save, and cook from the same page.

Side by side

Feature Larder Linktree
What it shows Your full cookbook - every recipe, browsable in one place A list of links to other places
Recipe storage Native - recipes live on your Larder page None - you link out to a blog, Notion, or PDF
Serving scaling Built in - followers adjust servings, amounts update Not applicable
Recipe import Paste text or URL, AI parses into structured recipe Not applicable
Custom design Colours, fonts, card styles per cookbook Theme presets
Pricing Free Free tier; paid for analytics and customization
Best for Food creators, home cooks, recipe-focused accounts Generic creators with multiple destinations

Pick Larder when

  • → Your content is mostly recipes.
  • → You want followers to actually cook from your page, not just discover it.
  • → You're tired of sending people to blog posts buried in ads and pop-ups.
  • → You want one URL that does everything - bio link, recipe library, social hub.

Pick Linktree when

  • → You're a generic creator with podcasts, courses, merch, and recipes are a side thing.
  • → Your recipes already live somewhere you're happy with (your own blog, a course platform) and you just need a router.

Common questions

Can I use Larder instead of Linktree? +

Yes. Larder gives you one public link - larder.bio/s/yourhandle - that shows your recipes plus links to your other socials and external sites. For most food creators it replaces Linktree entirely.

Does Larder support links to non-recipe content? +

Yes. Your cookbook has a links section for socials, newsletter signups, affiliate links, and external sites. The recipes are the main content, but you can put anything else there too.

Can I migrate my Linktree to Larder? +

There's no one-click migration since the products do different things, but copying your links across takes a couple of minutes. Recipes you link out to can be imported by pasting URLs.

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No credit card. No password. Your first recipe takes 60 seconds.

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