6 best newsletter Framer templates
Newsletter Framer templates are designed for writers and creators who are building an email-first business or growing a subscriber list as a primary channel. These templates include compelling homepage layouts that communicate the value of subscribing, sample issue or content previews, archive pages for past editions, and prominently placed sign-up forms. The design language is often editorial and content-forward — these sites need to give potential subscribers enough of a taste of your voice and content to make the subscription decision easy. Whether you're launching a new newsletter or building a web home for an established one, these templates give you the right structure.

Unlimited Access
Get unlimited access to all of my current and future Framer templates and components

Scribe
A simple blog template for writers, bloggers, and news teams

Narrate
A premium blog template for writers, news publications, and magazines

Monograph
A premium personal blog template with filtering and global search

Compose
A vibrant, clean and minimal blog template for bloggers, creators and entrepreneurs

Reflect
A high-quality, modern blog template for writers and news publications
Top quality Framer templates
Clean, simple, and modern design
20k+ happy customers
Designed and built by me
Uses the latest Framer features
Ready to use assets
100% mobile responsive
Easy to customise
SEO optimised
Fast performance
Dedicated 1:1 support
Related Framer templates
Simple, transparent pricing
Single template
Unlimited Access
Save 89%$2,753
What do other people say?
FAQs
Newsletter templates are designed for writers and creators who want a standalone web presence for their newsletter. They typically combine a compelling description of what you publish, a prominent signup form, and an archive of past issues — giving potential subscribers a clear sense of what they'll receive.
Framer's form integrations connect to MailerLite, ConvertKit, Kit, Buttondown, and most other newsletter platforms. Substack also supports embed widgets. You write and send newsletters in your preferred tool; Framer handles the landing page and signup capture.
A standalone site gives you more control over design, SEO, and the subscriber experience. It also means you're not dependent on Substack's platform. For newsletters at an early stage, Substack's simplicity is fine; as you build an audience, a custom site becomes a meaningful differentiator.
Yes. Framer's CMS lets you create an archive of past issues with title, date, and a brief description or excerpt. Linking to the full issue on your newsletter platform means visitors can sample your writing before subscribing.
Yes. Framer pages are indexed by Google, and a well-structured newsletter landing page with a clear description, keywords relevant to your topic, and fresh content in an archive can drive organic discovery. Many newsletter subscribers come through search, not just word of mouth.
Special discount
Enter your email to get 10% off your first Framer order
Unsubscribe at any time

























