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Share All Your Real Estate Listings With One Link (Free Tool for Realtors)

Share all real estate listings with one link. A free realtor profile page keeps listings, lead capture, and contact options in one place.

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Share All Your Real Estate Listings With One Link (Free Tool for Realtors)

If you want to share all your real estate listings with one link, use a realtor profile page that keeps your active listings, contact options, lead capture form, and social proof together. Perch Page is built for that exact job: one free link you can put in your Instagram bio, TikTok bio, Facebook page, email signature, QR code, and open house materials so people do not have to chase separate MLS, Zillow, brokerage, and website links.

This sounds small until you are actually in the middle of the work. A buyer sees a reel. A seller clicks your Facebook page. Someone from your sphere asks for "that listing you posted." If every answer is a different URL, you are making the public do your filing system for you.

I have been in real estate around Northwest Arkansas long enough to know that the boring parts of marketing usually decide whether leads come through. Bentonville relocation buyers, Fayetteville investors, Bella Vista downsizers, Rogers families, Springdale first-time buyers: they all want an easy next step. A clean link helps.

The problem: your listings are spread everywhere

Most agents do not have one source of truth that looks good to the public.

Your listing data may start in NWAR MLS or your local MLS. Then it appears on a brokerage site. Then Zillow and Realtor.com show versions of it. Then you post one property on Instagram, another in a Facebook album, and a third in a TikTok tour. The links multiply fast.

That creates three real problems.

People click from social with very little patience

Someone who clicks from Instagram is not sitting down to research for twenty minutes. They probably saw a clip, tapped your profile, and gave you one chance to make sense. If the link in your bio goes to a generic homepage, or worse, to one specific listing from three weeks ago, you lose the thread.

Separate URLs age badly

Individual listing links expire, redirect, or get buried. A link you added to a caption may make sense while the home is active, then become awkward once it sells. One central realtor profile link gives you a stable place to update the current inventory without editing every past post.

Buyers do not care which platform owns the page

Buyers and sellers do not wake up thinking, "I hope this agent sends me to exactly the right portal." They want to see the home, understand next steps, and contact a human. Your job is to reduce friction, not show them your whole vendor stack.

Why a single shareable link beats sending separate URLs

The strongest reason to use one link is control.

When you send someone to a Zillow page, a brokerage page, or a portal result, you may be sending them into an environment designed around the portal's goals. That can still be useful. I am not pretending those sites do not matter. But your social bio should send people to your agent hub first.

One link gives you:

  • A stable URL for every platform

  • A consistent first impression

  • A place to show all active listings

  • A contact form for buyer and seller questions

  • Room for reviews, local resources, and your personal site

  • A path into your CRM or follow-up process

On my own stack, I think of AllThingsNWA.com as the deeper local site, Client Keeper as the relationship system, and Perch Page as the simple front door from social. Each tool has a job. The link in bio should not try to be the whole kit and caboodle, but it should point people in the right direction.

Perch Page public profile showing multiple active listings, a lead form, and contact buttons under one URL

How Perch Page keeps your listings and lead capture in one URL

Perch Page is designed as a free realtor link page, not a generic creator page. That difference matters because "my listings page realtor" intent is specific. The searcher is not asking for a prettier button stack. They want a way to show listings and capture interest.

A good Perch Page setup can include:

  • Active listings or listing destinations

  • A "request a showing" path

  • Phone, email, and form contact options

  • Brokerage details and compliance-friendly information

  • Links to your real estate website

  • Reviews or social proof

  • Social profiles

  • Buyer and seller resources

The big win is that everything lives behind one realtor profile link. You can update the page as your inventory changes while keeping the same URL in your social bios.

Setup walkthrough: 3 steps

Step 1: Decide what the page should do first

Do not start with design. Start with the action.

If you have active listings, the action may be "request a showing." If you are newer and do not have listings yet, the action may be "start a home search" or "ask me a local market question." If your content is heavy on sellers, the action may be "request a simple home-value conversation."

Pick one primary action. Then build the page around it.

Step 2: Add listings, then support links

Put the listing section high on the page. Below that, add contact options, your main site, reviews, and any buyer or seller resources.

For a Northwest Arkansas example, an agent might organize the page like this:

  1. "View my current NWA listings"

  2. "Ask about a Bentonville or Rogers showing"

  3. "Search homes in Benton and Washington counties"

  4. "Read Google reviews"

  5. "Visit AllThingsNWA-style local guide"

  6. "Contact Phillip"

Use your actual market and actual resources. Do not pad the page with vague links like "Helpful Stuff" unless it truly helps.

Step 3: Test the click from your phone

Open Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and your email signature from your phone. Tap the link like a consumer would. If you need to pinch, scroll forever, or decode button labels, fix it before you post.

This is where a lot of agents skip the final 10%. They build the page on desktop and never check the mobile experience. Social traffic is mobile traffic. Build for thumbs.

Where to put your one link

Your Perch Page link can work anywhere you need a short, stable real estate URL. The canonical product URL is https://clientkeepercrm.com/porch-perch.

Instagram bio

Use it as the main profile link. Then make your last bio line a clear CTA, such as "Browse listings + ask me about NWA homes below."

For bio copy ideas, link readers to /blog/realtor-instagram-bio-examples-2026.

TikTok bio

TikTok gives you very little room. The bio link has to do more work there, so send viewers to one page with listings, contact, and resources.

Facebook business page

Add the link in your page details, intro text, and featured posts where natural. Facebook still matters for many suburban and secondary markets, especially when your sphere includes past clients, family, and local referrals.

LinkedIn profile

If you use LinkedIn for relocation clients, vendor relationships, or professional referrals, your Perch Page page gives people a less formal next step than a full website.

Email signature

Add "View my listings and contact options" under your phone number. It is simple, and it keeps every email from turning into a dead end.

Business card QR code

Printed cards get stale. QR codes pointing to one live page do not. If a listing sells, update Perch Page instead of reprinting everything.

What not to do

Do not make a page with 25 equal-weight buttons. That is not organization; that is avoidance with fonts.

Do not link only to portals and forget your own contact form. Do not leave expired listings at the top. Do not use "click here" labels when "View current listings" is clearer. And please, do not send every buyer to a homepage that never mentions the listing they clicked for.

The best one-link setup feels obvious. The visitor should know what you do, where you work, what they can browse, and how to reach you within a few seconds.

FAQ

How do I share all my real estate listings with one link?

Create a central realtor profile page with your listings, contact options, and lead form. Then use that one URL across Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, LinkedIn, email signatures, and QR codes.

Is Perch Page free for sharing listings?

Yes. Perch Page is positioned as a free link-in-bio and realtor profile page for real estate agents, with no credit card required.

Should I link to Zillow, Realtor.com, my brokerage site, or Perch Page?

Use Perch Page as the central hub, then link out to listing destinations where needed. That gives you one stable public URL while still letting visitors reach the listing source you choose.

Can new agents use a listings page if they do not have listings yet?

Yes, but do not pretend you have inventory. Use the page for home search links, buyer resources, seller resources, local guides, and a contact form until you have listings of your own.

What should I name my listing link?

Use plain language: "View Current Listings," "Browse NWA Homes," "Ask About a Showing," or "Start Your Home Search." Avoid vague labels like "Resources."

What related Perch Page post should I read next?

Read /blog/free-link-in-bio-for-real-estate-agents for the broader setup guide, or /blog/linktree-vs-perchpage-real-estate if you are comparing generic Linktree-style tools against a real estate-native page.

More Perch Page field notes

Browse more bio-link guides or jump into the product page for the full Perch Page overview.

Share All Your Real Estate Listings With One Link (Free Tool for Realtors) | Blog | Perch Page · Client Keeper