If you play out, release tracks, or run a night, the link in your Instagram bio is doing real work. It is often the only clickable thing a new fan finds after hearing you on a lineup or catching you in someone's story. So it is worth asking plainly: what is the best link in bio for DJs in 2026, and what should it actually do? Most popular link tools were built for influencers posting affiliate links, not for artists whose whole job is getting people to listen, onto a guestlist, or into a room.
Why generic link lists fail DJs
A stack of grey buttons is fine if all you need is a menu. For a DJ it quietly costs you.
- It bounces fans away. Every tap sends someone off to Spotify, then YouTube, then a ticket site. Each hop is a chance to lose them, and none of that attention comes back to you.
- There is nowhere sensible for gigs. A single "tickets" button cannot hold six dates across three cities with three different ticket sellers.
- You learn nothing. Most link pages report clicks and little else. You cannot see which release pulled people in, or which city is warming up before you announce a show there.
- Everyone's looks the same. The same rounded buttons on the same off-white page, whether you play ambient or 150 bpm hard techno. Your sound is specific. Your page reads as generic.
None of this is fatal on its own. Together it means the busiest link you own is working against the way a music career actually grows.
A link in bio is not a menu of exits. For a DJ it is the front door to everything you make, and it should keep people inside.
What the best link in bio for DJs actually needs
Strip it back and a DJ needs a short list of things done properly.
Music that plays in place. A fan should hear a mix or a track without leaving the page. Embed your latest SoundCloud upload or Bandcamp release, pull in your Spotify, and let people listen where they landed. The job of the page is to start the play, not to hand someone off and hope they arrive.
Per-gig ticket links. Shows are not one button. You want a proper list: date, city, venue, and a direct link to Resident Advisor, DICE, or whichever seller that promoter uses, each one going straight to the right event. When a date sells out or passes, it comes off cleanly.
A way to capture fans. Followers on a platform are rented. An email or a phone number is yours. A good setup lets a fan drop their email for a guestlist spot, an unreleased edit, or a heads-up before the next tour, so you can reach them directly next time instead of paying to be seen.
A look that matches the music. Dark, sharp, and yours. If your sound is heavy and precise, a page that looks like everyone else's undersells it before a note plays. Design is not decoration here. It is the first thing a booker or a new fan judges.
Real ownership. Your page should live on an address you control, carry your name, and not start charging to remove someone else's branding. If you build an audience there, that audience stays yours.
How Moxi is built for this
This is the gap Moxi was built to close. Instead of a list of links that push people out, it gives you one dark, premium page you own, where fans listen, follow, grab tickets, and buy, without being bounced to a third-party shop.
A few things matter specifically for DJs:
- Mixes and tracks play on the page, front and centre, not behind a tap.
- A real shows list, where every date carries its own ticket link to whichever seller the promoter uses, so one page covers a whole tour.
- Fan capture plus real analytics, so you collect emails and see which release or city is driving attention, then announce shows where demand already is.
- One-tap Apple Pay with 0% commission. Sell a record, a shirt, or a ticket and you keep the sale. Moxi does not take a cut. The pricing page has the detail.
- You own the address. Every artist gets a free yourname.moxi.fan link, and you can connect a custom domain. Moxi also builds the SEO so you rank first when someone searches your name.
You can see how working artist pages look on the artists directory before committing to anything.
Choosing and using the best link in bio for DJs
You do not need a new strategy, just a better front door. A practical order:
- 01Set up your page and put your music, shows, and fan capture on it.
- 02Put that one link in your Instagram bio, your SoundCloud profile, and every other platform bio.
- 03Add it to flyers and posters as a short URL or a QR code, so someone at the club can scan it mid-set.
- 04Send new releases and gig announcements to that same link, and watch which cities respond.
The best link in bio for DJs is not the one with the most buttons. It is the one that keeps fans listening, sells tickets to the right rooms, grows a list you own, and looks the way your music sounds. If that is what you want, you can start your page in a few minutes.
- How to Rank Your Artist Name on Google (and Own the Result)Your own name is the easiest search term you will ever compete for. Here is how to take the top spot and keep it.
- The Best Link in Bio for Musicians: How to Choose OneHow to choose a landing page that keeps the fans you earn, takes no cut of your sales, and ranks for your own name.
- How to Sell Merch as an Independent Artist and Keep the MoneyThe real economics of merch, how to sell direct from a page you own, and a launch checklist you can work through today.




