WP Landing Kit 1.1 Update: Child Pages & Multi-Page Sites
WP Landing Kit version 1.1 introduces child page support, finally letting you create multi-page sites like landing pages with thank you pages on custom domains from one WordPress installation.
WP Landing Kit
Connects multiple custom domains to a single WordPress installation, allowing you to build and manage landing pages for different businesses from one place.
Marketers, agencies, and freelancers who build landing pages for multiple clients or businesses and want to reduce hosting costs.
Unbounce, Leadpages, Instapage, ClickFunnels
What Is WP Landing Kit and Why Does It Matter?
If you're running paid traffic campaigns for multiple businesses, you've probably felt the pain of managing separate hosting accounts, WordPress installs, or expensive landing page builders like Unbounce. WP Landing Kit is a WordPress plugin that solves this by letting you connect multiple domains to a single WordPress installation.
The concept is straightforward: instead of spinning up a new server or paying for a dedicated landing page platform for every client, you maintain one WordPress site and map custom domains to specific pages. Your client sees their own branded domain, and you keep everything centralized. It's a smart approach that cuts down on both monthly expenses and management overhead.
When WP Landing Kit first launched, there was one significant limitation — you could only create single-page sites. That meant if you needed a landing page plus a thank you page on the same domain, you were out of luck. Version 1.1 changes that entirely.
What's New in Version 1.1: Child Page Support
The headline feature of WP Landing Kit 1.1 is child page support, which the developer calls URL mapping. In practical terms, this means you can now map multiple pages from your WordPress installation to different paths on a single custom domain.
For example, you could have `yourdomain.com` load your main landing page, and `yourdomain.com/thank-you` load a separate thank you page — all served from the same WordPress install running on a completely different primary domain. This was the most requested feature after the initial release, and it opens up the plugin for real-world marketing workflows where you almost always need at least two pages: a landing page and a post-conversion page.
The URL mapping interface lives inside the domain settings panel. When you add a domain, you can now create multiple URL mappings, each pointing a specific path to any page in your WordPress installation. The setup is clean and intuitive.
Setting Up Multi-Page Sites: Step by Step
Getting a multi-page site running with WP Landing Kit 1.1 starts with creating your pages in WordPress as you normally would. In the walkthrough, Dave set up two Elementor pages — a landing page and a thank you page — using the free Astra theme. One important tip: set the page layout to "Elementor Canvas" so visitors see a clean landing page without your site's navigation and header.
From the WP Landing Kit settings panel under "Domains," you add your custom domain and then use the new URL mapping feature. Each mapping consists of a URL path (like `/` for the root or `/thank-you`) and a resource — the WordPress page it should display. You can add as many mappings as you need, and they all share the same custom domain.
There's also an option to enforce HTTPS, which you'll want to enable for any production landing page. Once you publish the domain configuration in WP Landing Kit, you'll need to handle the DNS side of things.
DNS Configuration and Hosting Setup
After configuring WP Landing Kit, you need to point your custom domain's DNS records to the server running your WordPress installation. This involves creating two A records with your DNS provider — one for the root domain (using `@` as the host) and one for `www`, both pointing to your server's IP address.
Dave demonstrated this using Namecheap as the DNS provider and GridPane as the WordPress host. If you're using a different registrar or host, the process is similar — you just need to create those A records and wait for DNS propagation. You can check propagation status using a tool like whatsmydns.net; it typically takes a few minutes to reach most servers worldwide.
On the hosting side, you'll need to add your custom domain as an alias or secondary domain. In GridPane, this means going to the domain section of your site, adding the new domain with the type set to "alias," and then provisioning an SSL certificate for it. Most quality WordPress hosts — whether it's Cloudways, GridPane, or others — support domain aliases, so WP Landing Kit isn't locked to any specific hosting provider.
The Result: Mini Sites from One WordPress Install
Once everything is configured, the mapped pages are accessible on your custom domain with proper SSL. WordPress even shows a "Mapped URL" column in the standard Pages list, so you can see at a glance which pages are serving on which domains.
The real power here is scalability. You can repeat this process for as many client domains as you need — each one gets its own set of mapped pages, all running from a single WordPress installation on a single server. No additional hosting costs per client, no juggling multiple WordPress dashboards, and no need to request access to a client's existing WordPress setup.
For agencies running paid traffic campaigns, this workflow is a significant improvement. You maintain full control of the pages, can update them instantly, and the client's domain stays front and center. It's the kind of infrastructure efficiency that directly impacts your bottom line.
Pricing and the Lifetime Deal
WP Landing Kit offers a lifetime deal at $259, which grants access to their top-tier Developer plan — normally priced at $159 per year. The Developer plan comes with essentially no limitations and includes lifetime support, making the deal pay for itself in under two years compared to the annual subscription.
Finding the lifetime deal pricing on the WP Landing Kit website isn't immediately obvious. From the homepage, click the buy button, and look for the text that says "lifetime deal" — it's not highlighted or styled differently from the surrounding text, so it's easy to miss. If you only need a single installation, the annual pricing is also reasonable, but the lifetime deal is the better value for anyone planning to use the plugin long-term or across multiple projects.
Final Thoughts: Is WP Landing Kit Worth It?
With the addition of child page support in version 1.1, WP Landing Kit addresses its biggest limitation and becomes a genuinely practical tool for anyone managing landing pages across multiple domains. The ability to build multi-page mini sites — complete with landing pages, thank you pages, and whatever else you need — from a single WordPress installation is a real workflow improvement.
The plugin works with any WordPress page builder (Elementor was used in this demo), any theme, and any hosting provider that supports domain aliases. That flexibility, combined with the straightforward setup process and competitive lifetime pricing, makes it a solid addition to any marketer's or agency's toolkit.
If you have questions about WP Landing Kit or want to discuss how it fits into your workflow, the Profitable Tools Facebook Group is a great place to connect with other users and get advice.
Watch the Full Video
Prefer watching to reading? Check out the full video on YouTube for a complete walkthrough with live demos and commentary.