You Can Now Collect Form Responses Directly on Your Bio Page
Selfbase now has a built-in Form block. Build custom forms with a drag-and-drop editor, view submissions in your dashboard, and export them as CSV.

Bio pages are good at sending people somewhere.
They are less good at capturing anything useful when people arrive. You can collect emails with the email gate — that covers a specific use case well. But for everything else — enquiries, bookings, applications, feedback — you have been relying on external tools or just a plain email link.
That changes with the new Form block.
What the Form block does
The Form block lets you build a custom form and embed it directly in your page. You drag fields into the order you want, label them, set which ones are required, and save. The form lives on your page like any other block.
Supported field types:
- Text — single-line input for names, subjects, short answers
- Email — email field with built-in validation
- Textarea — multi-line input for longer messages
When someone submits the form, their response is stored in Selfbase. No third-party service. No forwarding rules. The submission is just there, in your dashboard, ready to view.
Where submissions go
All responses appear in the Forms section of your page dashboard.
You can browse submissions, search by form name, and delete individual entries. When you want to work with your data elsewhere — import it into a spreadsheet, hand it off to your team, or load it into a CRM — there is a CSV export button that respects whatever search filter you have active.
Display modes
The Form block supports two display modes:
Inline — the form renders directly on your page, visible to anyone who scrolls to it.
Modal — a button sits on the page. Tap it, and the form opens in a modal. Useful when you want to keep the page clean but still give people a way to reach out.
Webhooks
If you want submissions to flow somewhere automatically — a Slack channel, a Notion database, a custom backend — you can set up a webhook under Settings → Integrations.
Webhooks fire on three events: form submissions, email captures, and purchases. Each request is signed with HMAC-SHA256 so you can verify it came from Selfbase.
What this is useful for
The Form block fits anywhere you currently have an email link or a "DM me" prompt:
- Freelancers and consultants — a simple enquiry or availability form
- Coaches and educators — an intake or application form
- Newsletters and blogs — a feedback or topic suggestion form
- Anyone with a service — a contact or booking request form
It is not a replacement for dedicated form tools with conditional logic, branching, or payments built in. But for most things a bio page needs a form to do, this covers it.
The Selfbase angle
We try to keep Selfbase focused on things that are genuinely useful to creators and small brands — not everything a full website platform might offer.
The Form block fits that. People arrive on your page warm and want a way to connect. A friction-free form right there, with no redirect to a different service, keeps the moment alive.
The Form block is a PRO feature, available on any paid plan. Submissions are stored in Selfbase and can be exported at any time.
Photo source: Unsplash
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