The Default Website Menu
Your website menu is the navigation reference for your visitors to get to know your site. Your SupaPass website menu can include:
Your default content links (Video, Audio, Articles - learn how they work and how to rename them below).
Any additional links you want to add (e.g your e-commerce store, additional site links, your booking link, anywhere else you'd like your visitors to go).
Your members' login & register buttons and pricing button to your store (rename or hide them below).
Your brand logo.
Top Tip π‘ Your brand logo in the top-left always links back to your home page, so it doubles as a built-in "Home" button. If you'd also like a labelled "Home" item in the menu, see the FAQ below.
Website Menu Preview
You can view a preview of the current menu structure at any time navigating to Design > Website Navigation. The default links will include the following:
Video
Audio
Articles
Login
Register
Pricing
Note
Good to know π Each content menu item will appear once you have published content of that type, whilst the pricing link will appear once you publish your first Paid Product.
How the default content tabs work
Your menu starts with three default content tabs: Video, Audio, and Articles. These behave differently from custom links you add yourself, so it's worth understanding how they work.
They are linked to a content type automatically. Your Audio tab (often renamed "Podcast") routes to your audio content, your Articles tab (often renamed "Blog") routes to your articles, and your Video tab routes to your videos. You don't need to link these manually.
They appear automatically when you publish. As soon as you publish content of that type, the matching tab appears and takes your audience to that content area.
They hide automatically when there's nothing to show. If you have no published content of a given type, there's nothing for the tab to display, so we automatically hide it from your audience. This is why a content tab can seem to "disappear."
Important π why a content tab might look empty A content tab only displays content once that content sits inside a Section. A list on its own won't appear until it's placed inside a Section, because your site never displays empty Sections. So if your Podcast tab leads to a blank area, check that your audio list has been added to an audio Section. Learn more in Creating your content β curating with Sections & Lists.
Customizing your Website Menu
You can edit your website menu & footer navigating to Design > Website Navigation
Adding Custom Header Links
Custom header links allow for more options to customize the content of your website. There are two options for creating a new custom header link:
Solo link, which links to just one place.
Dropdown groups which can contain multiple links.
Top Tipπ‘
We recommend a limit of up to 5 groups or solo links for the best experience, additional links can be added to your footer.
Solo Links
Solo links are website header menu items that link to a single page, such as a contact us page or about page. When creating a solo link you give it a name, choose the type, and select the destination and which side you want that link to appear. Links can go to either an external page with a URL or an internal page with one of the other pages you've built in the Page Editor, lists, products and content pages.
Dropdown Groups
Dropdown groups can be used for groups of similar links. When creating a new group, you will add your first link to that group, so choose the link type, and the destination URL and which side you want the group to appear on. Links can be switched between groups and solo links by clicking the 3 dots next to the menu item.
Editing what a tab links to
By default, your content tabs route to your content areas, but you can repoint almost any menu item to a destination of your choice. To do this, go to Design > Navigation, click the 3 dots next to the menu item and choose Edit. Then pick a Link Type:
Select Page - link to one of your own landing pages. Only live pages can be selected here; pages still in draft status won't appear in the list until they're published.
List- link directly to a specific list
Content - link directly to a specific piece of content.
Product - link directly to a specific product
External link - paste a full URL (including
https://) to send visitors to any web address, such as a marketing site you host elsewhere.
Here are a few common examples:
About β point an About tab to a live About page, or use an external link to an existing page elsewhere.
Donate β rather than sending your audience to an external donation tool (and paying its transaction fees), you can set up a donation product in Commerce β making sure your Stripe account is already connected β and link the tab to that product, so your audience never has to leave your website.
Lead magnet β link to a free piece of content directly. We recommend placing the content behind a free email registration, so you capture the visitor's email when they access it. See How to use the Free with Login product.
Top Tip π‘ You can also use our built-in Call to Action slugs (like /audio/12345) to link a menu item straight to a specific list or sub-page.
Rename the default tabs
The names of your content tabs and user tabs can be customized to reflect your needs, simply the 3 dots, rename and save.
Change the order
You can also rearrange the order of your website menu, putting your most important content first.
Hiding links
If you no longer need a link, you can hide it by clicking the dot menu and selecting 'Hide'. To reveal, simply click 'Show'.
All menu items can be hidden with the exception of the Pricing page, which is always visible if you have active Stripe pricing plans.
Hiding account management links such as Login and Registration may make it difficult for users to navigate your website. You should only consider hiding Registration if you never intend to have any free content, and Login should only be hidden if all of your content is free without registration.
Keep in mind πHiding links from the menu does not remove the pages from your website entirely, it just prevents them from being accessed via the menu.
App Links
Links configured in the website builder do not appear in the apps, these need to be configured separately.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why isn't my Podcast / Video / Blog tab showing?
Why isn't my Podcast / Video / Blog tab showing?
The default content tabs only appear when you have published content of that type, and that content has to sit inside a Section to display. If a tab is missing or leads to a blank area, check that you've published at least one list of that content type and that the list has been placed inside a Section β your site never shows empty Sections. See Creating your content β curating with Sections & Lists for the full walkthrough.
Can I point a tab straight to one specific list, page, or website?
Can I point a tab straight to one specific list, page, or website?
Yes. Click the 3 dots next to the menu item and choose Edit, then pick the Link Type: Content to link to a specific list or item, Select Page for one of your live landing pages, or External link to send visitors to any URL (include https://). You can also use a CTA slug such as /audio/12345.
How do I add a "Home" link to my menu?
How do I add a "Home" link to my menu?
Your brand logo in the top-left already links back to your home page. If you'd also like a labelled "Home" item, add a new solo link: in Design > Navigation click Add link, name it "Home", set the type to External link, and enter the full URL of your website (including https://). Save, and your "Home" item will sit alongside your other menu links.
I renamed a tab but it still goes to the same place β why?
I renamed a tab but it still goes to the same place β why?
Renaming a default content tab is cosmetic only. It changes the label your audience sees (for example, "Audio" to "Podcast"), but the tab still routes to the same underlying content area. If you want it to go somewhere different, edit the tab's destination using the steps in Editing what a tab links to above.







