Can You Have More Than One Substack
How to Create Multiple Substack Newsletters (Under One Account)
Newsletters are bigger than ever.
Platforms like Substack, Beehiiv, and Kit are thriving, and their popularity is inspiring thousands of writers to start newsletters every day.
For some people, though, one newsletter isn’t enough.
They’re starting multiple newsletters to explore different ideas and formats.
Here’s why:
Different topics: Some writers cover a variety of subjects that don’t fit under one newsletter.
Format and length: A mix of short updates and in-depth pieces might call for separate newsletters.
For fun: Some people just enjoy creating and experimenting with new projects.
It’s a great way to expand your creativity, and platforms like Substack make it easier than ever to manage multiple newsletters from one account.
Setting Up Multiple Newsletters on Substack
Over the years, Substack has grown beyond a simple newsletter platform. Now, it supports features like chat, cross-posting, Notes, podcasts, videos, and more. While this adds flexibility, it can feel a bit overwhelming if you’re new.
So, here’s a quick start guide:
Step 1: Create Your Substack Profile
Start by signing up for a Substack profile. Head to Substack’s homepage, click the orange “Sign up” button, and follow the steps to create your account.
At this stage, you’re a reader, not a writer—you can subscribe to newsletters but don’t have your own publication yet. Your profile will be at: www.substack.com/@yourname.
Step 2: Create a Publication
To start writing, you’ll need to create a publication (your newsletter). On the Substack homepage, click “Start writing.” If you’re already signed in, go to your profile menu in the top-right corner, click “Settings,” scroll to “Publications,” and choose “Create publication.”
From here, you can name your publication, set up a subdomain, and customize its design.
Step 3: Launch Multiple Publications
If you want more than one newsletter, just repeat the steps:
Go to the “Settings” page.
Scroll to “Publications.”
Click “Create publication.”
Each publication will have its own subscribers, design, and content. They function independently, so subscribers won’t automatically overlap.
Step 4: Manage Multiple Newsletters
Your account can house multiple publications, each with its own name, logo, subscriber list, and archives.
For example, you could run one newsletter about tech trends, another about personal essays, and a third about recipes—all under one profile.
Love Movies?
Get my Notion template, Moviebuff, 50% off today. It’s the perfect template to track what you watch. Movies, TV shows, documentaries, and more. And it looks cool as well 😉
Managing Sections Within One Newsletter
If you want to keep everything under one newsletter but cover multiple topics, Substack has a feature called Sections. This lets you organize different topics into distinct segments for the same audience.
Setting up sections is a bigger topic, so I’ve covered it separately. You can find that guide here.
The Bottom Line
Running multiple newsletters makes sense if you want to explore different topics or formats without confusing your audience.
Substack lets you create multiple publications under a single account, so there’s no need to juggle separate logins.
If you’re itching to branch out, give it a shot.
Thank you for this! I was wondering if multiple newsletters would be tough to manage...and truly stay engaged with your community. Still have (3) distinct things I really want to discuss. So thanks for this!
I needed this information when I created my second Substack for my podcast.