Free tool

Free Pinterest Bio Generator

Our free Pinterest bio generator writes profile bios that fit Pinterest's 160-character limit and pull the right audience. Pick your niche, set the tone, and go.

Optional. Separate keywords with commas.

How to Use the Pinterest Bio Generator

Writing a Pinterest bio that converts used to mean rewriting the same 160 characters until it sounded right. Our AI generates multiple ready-to-paste bio options in 10 seconds. Here's how:

Step 1: Enter your niche or industry

Type your focus, "interior design," "fitness coaching," "food blogging," "travel photography." This is what the AI uses to write bios that match your audience and signal authority in your niche.

Step 2: Add your business or brand name (optional)

Drop in your brand name, "Studio Bloom," "FitLife Co." The AI weaves it into the bio naturally instead of awkward "Welcome to Studio Bloom!" openers that waste characters.

Step 3: Add keywords to include (optional)

Add 3–5 keywords your audience searches for, "sustainable, handmade, organic, tips." The AI weaves them into the bio so you rank in Pinterest profile search, not just pin search.

Step 4: Pick your tone

Choose how the bio reads, Professional, Friendly, Playful, Inspirational, Witty, or Authoritative. Most generators output one flat voice. Ours adapts so the bio sounds like you, not like AI.

Note: To go beyond a bio and have AI auto-generate full Pinterest content, pins, descriptions, hashtags, board names, across your whole site, Get started

Anatomy of a Pinterest Bio That Actually Pulls Followers

Most Pinterest bios look like this:

Typical bio
Hi! I'm Sarah ✨ Welcome to my page! I love cooking, traveling, and sharing my journey 🌸 Follow along for daily inspo!

148 characters. Reads warm, friendly, totally generic. And it does almost nothing for the algorithm or the user landing on the profile.

Here's the same person's bio rewritten:

Bio rewritten
30-minute vegan dinner recipes for busy weeknights. Plant-based meal prep guides, grocery lists, and budget-friendly tips. New recipes weekly ↓

143 characters. Notice what changed:

  • The hook is what they offer, not who they are. "30-minute vegan dinner recipes" is a search query Pinterest users actually type. "Hi I'm Sarah" is not. The first 80 characters now do real work, they signal value before the user even decides to keep reading.

  • Three keywords are woven in naturally: vegan dinner recipes, plant-based meal prep, budget-friendly. Pinterest's algorithm scans bios for keyword matches. That's three more ways this profile surfaces in search.

  • The CTA is implicit and concrete. "New recipes weekly ↓" sets a clear expectation and points to the website link slot below. No "follow along for inspo!", just a reason to click.

  • The personality is still there. "Busy weeknights" and "budget-friendly" are subjective choices that signal who this account is for. The bio isn't sterile, it's just earning its space.

The four questions to ask before you publish your bio

Before you paste it into Pinterest, run your bio through these:

  1. Could a stranger guess what I post about from the first 80 characters? If not, rewrite the opening.
  2. Are there at least 2–3 keywords my audience would search for? If your bio only contains your name and adjectives, it's invisible to search.
  3. Is the value clear, or am I making them work to figure out why they should follow me? Lead with what they get.
  4. Am I under 160 characters? Pinterest cuts off bios at exactly 160. Count before you publish, or use the Character Counter.

If you can't answer yes to all four, your bio is leaving followers on the table. Run it through the generator above, pick the option that nails all four, and paste it in.

What Makes a Pinterest Bio Actually Work

A Pinterest bio is 160 characters. That's it. Six rules separate bios that pull followers from bios that get scrolled past:

  • Pinterest bios are limited to 160 characters. Not 200, not 500. Pinterest's hard cap is 160, and there's no exception, even verified accounts. Anything longer gets truncated. Plan around it.

  • Front-load your value in the first 80 characters. Pinterest shows the first ~80 characters in profile previews, search results, and follow recommendations. If your hook isn't there, you've lost the user before they ever see the rest.

  • Keywords beat clever taglines. "Plant-based recipes & meal prep guides" outranks "Cooking up something delicious!", Pinterest scans bios for keywords when matching profiles to search queries. Your bio is a ranking signal, not just a description.

  • Lead with what you offer, not who you are. "Vegan dinner recipes for busy weeknights" beats "Hi, I'm Sarah and I love cooking!", Pinterest users follow accounts based on the value they get, not the person behind the account.

  • Skip the emojis (mostly). One or two intentional emojis are fine. A bio that's 30% emojis looks unprofessional and wastes character count. Emojis aren't readable by Pinterest's keyword-matching algorithm.

  • Add a single clear CTA. "↓ Free meal plan" or "→ Shop the collection" with a link to your website. One CTA, not three. Pinterest only allows one website link in your profile, make it count.

After your bio is set, generate Pinterest-optimized board names that match the audience your bio attracts, and use the Keyword Research Tool to find the highest-volume keywords for your niche.

Automate your entire Pinterest workflow

Supapin combines all these tools into one automated pipeline. Scan your site, generate pins, write SEO-optimized content, and publish to Pinterest, all on autopilot.

No credit card required to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know about the Pinterest Bio Generator