Page URLs

Updated

An overview of reserved slugs and how to change your URLs in the Pages panel.

From the Pages panel, you can manage your page’s general information, such as the page URL. Every site comes with utility pages by default, and some additional pages are created for sites that have Ecommerce and/or Users enabled. While you can change the URL slugs for static pages you create, these utility pages have reserved URL slugs (the part of a URL that identifies a specific page on a website, e.g., /404, /checkout, etc.) that can’t be edited or overwritten.

Static pages

Static pages include Ecommerce pages, User pages, and Utility pages. You can create new static pages in the Pages panel

Every site automatically comes with a Home page, but you can add more pages (e.g., About, Contact, Team). The name you give a new static page will also be the page URL (e.g., domain.com/newpage). If you want to change the URL, you can do so from the Slug field in Page settings.

There are a few reserved slugs (slugs you can’t use) to prevent duplicate slugs, which cause redirect issues and bad analytics. If you try to use a reserved slug, you’ll get a warning indicating that the slug is reserved.

Folders

You can create folders to organize pages that fall under the same category. For example, if you have several different types of real estate pages you want to style separately, you can create a folder called “Real Estate” and nest your individual real estate pages inside. 

Note

Only static pages can be organized in folders.

To create a folder:

  1. Go to the Pages panel
  2. Click Create new folder 
  3. Name and create your folder 

Folders can’t have the same URL as a Collection. If you already have a Collection named “Project,” then a folder can’t have a URL named “Project.”

For sites with Ecommerce enabled, there are 2 reserved slugs you can’t use for a folder:

  1. /product
  2. /category

Learn more about folders.

Dynamic pages

Dynamic pages, also called CMS Collection pages or Template pages, give you the ability to design a page template and then dynamically populate that page with content from a CMS Collection. These can be collections of blog posts, team members, job postings – anything you want. 

For sites with Ecommerce enabled, there are 2 reserved slugs you can’t use for a Collection:

  1. /product
  2. /category

Learn more about Collection pages.

Ecommerce pages 

For sites with Ecommerce enabled, there are 3 reserved slugs you can’t use for static pages:

  1. Checkout page: /checkout
  2. PayPal checkout page: /paypal-checkout
  3. Order confirmation page: /order-confirmation 

Learn more about Ecommerce checkout pages.

User pages

For sites with Users enabled, several User pages are automatically created to support basic user functionality. There are 6 reserved slugs for User pages that static pages can’t use:

  1. Log in page: /log-in
  2. Sign up page: /sign-up
  3. Reset password page: /reset-password
  4. Update password page: /update-password
  5. Access denied page: /access-denied
  6. User account page: /user-account

Learn more about User pages.

Utility pages

2 Utility pages are included by default on each site: the Password page and the 404 error page. Additionally, when you add a Search component to your site, a Search results utility page is automatically created. 

Utility pages have the following reserved slugs: 

  1. Password page: /401 
  2. 404 error page: /404
  3. Search results page: /search

You can change the names of these utility pages, but you can’t change their URL slugs.

Supported characters in page URLs

Webflow only supports lowercase Latin alphabet characters (a-z) and numbers (0-9) in page URLs. This means:

  • Any non-Latin characters inputted in a page slug field are automatically converted to Latin characters. Non-Latin characters will be converted to their sound/pronunciation (i.e., “분홍색” becomes “bunhongsaeg”)
  • Special non-letter/non-number characters (e.g., “!,” “~,” “.,” “&,” etc.) are automatically removed from page slugs
  • All uppercase characters are automatically converted to lowercase characters in page slugs

Learn more: