I would like the form to only appear on certain pages, is that possible?
control the display for a more relevant browsing experience
Key points • Yes, you can display the form only on certain pages • The method depends on the type of embedded form • Targeting improves user experience and marketing performance
Limiting the display of your registration form to specific pages of your hotel website is an excellent strategy for controlling the user experience and tailoring your message to the right place. For example, you can choose to display the form only on the homepage, in the footer, on offer pages, or on a dedicated landing page. Several options exist depending on how your form is integrated.
💡 Tip: Too many forms can tire your visitors. Placing them strategically increases conversions.
Can the form be displayed only on certain pages? Yes, absolutely.
1. If the form is native
This is the most flexible option. Your team can: • place the form directly on the desired pages • remove the form from pages where it's not needed • create a reusable version of the form and then selectively add it • manage its visibility within the Designer's structure itself
You have complete control over when and where the form appears.
💡 Tip: Consider creating a reusable component to save time during updates.
2. If the form is an embed (Mailchimp, Brevo…)
With an embed, the process is just as simple: • you only integrate the code into the pages where the form should appear • you don't add the embed to pages where registration shouldn't be offered • you can duplicate an existing section and choose which pages to display it on
Sections containing an embed can be enabled or disabled on a page-by-page basis.
3. If your site uses a form via API, Make or Zapier
In this case, the form is usually visually native, which means that: • you freely choose the pages where the form is displayed • automation only concerns data submission, not display • you can independently test the display logic and the submission logic
This solution combines visual flexibility and technical robustness.
4. If you wish to customize the display (advanced options)
It is also possible to display the form according to specific conditions, for example: • only for new visitors • only for specific pages (offers, blog, landing pages) • after a certain percentage of scrolling • according to the site's language • according to the device used (mobile, desktop)
This requires a small technical adjustment and allows for a highly personalized experience.
Best practices for targeted advertising
- Place the form on high-intent pages (offers, news, inspirational articles) • Avoid displaying it everywhere to prevent overwhelming the user experience • Test different locations (footer, central section, lightweight pop-up) • Maintain visual consistency even if it appears on different pages • Check mobile display, especially if the form is large
💡 Tip: Offer pages and the homepage are often the spaces where forms perform best.
Conclusion
Yes, you can display your registration form only on certain pages of your hotel website. Whether your form is native, embedded, or connected to an automation, its display can be precisely controlled. This flexibility allows you to tailor the user experience, avoid visual overload, and optimize email collection.