Sell AI prompts

How to sell AI prompts
and ChatGPT prompt packs.

A great prompt is hours of iteration compressed into a block of text anyone can paste and get results from. There's nothing to ship and nothing to host, which makes prompts one of the easiest things on the internet to sell. linklck paywalls a text block or a doc link directly, so you can sell a ChatGPT prompt pack with nothing but a URL. Free to start, a flat 15% only when you sell.

Selling a prompt pack in three steps

1

Assemble the pack as text or a doc

Collect your best prompts into a markdown document: each prompt with a name, what it's for, the variables to fill in, and an example output. Small packs paste directly into linklck as text, and buyers read them on the unlock page. Bigger libraries can live in a Google Doc or Notion page; you paywall the share link instead.

2

Set a price and publish

Write the preview buyers see before paying: what the prompts do, which models they're tuned for, and what results they produce (screenshots in your marketing help here). Set a price (most packs land between $9 and $29) and publish. You get a short branded URL like linklck.com/firehorse47 with Stripe checkout in front of the content.

3

Share where you already show your results

If you post AI outputs on X, TikTok, or YouTube, the pack link belongs in every caption and bio: 'the exact prompts I used'. Buyers pay by card with no account and see the prompts seconds later. You keep 85% of every sale, payment processing included, with payouts via Stripe.

Suggested pricing for AI prompts

Buyers pay for outcomes and curation, not word count. These bands reflect what prompt products realistically sell for direct-to-audience:

Prompt productTypical priceYou keep (85%)
Single mega-prompt (one deep, tested workflow)$5–$9$4.25–$7.65
Niche pack, 10–50 prompts (copy, code, images)$9–$29$7.65–$24.65
Prompt system with guide and examples$29–$79$24.65–$67.15
Ongoing library (repriced as it grows)$49–$99$41.65–$84.15

With no fixed per-transaction charge deducted from your share, a $5 prompt is still worth selling; you keep $4.25. Full fee math on the pricing page.

What separates prompts that sell from prompts that don't

  • Proof beats promises. Show the output publicly (the ad copy, the image, the code review) and sell the prompt that produced it. The result is the marketing; the prompt is the product.
  • Niche packs outsell general ones. "50 prompts for real-estate listing descriptions" beats "500 amazing ChatGPT prompts" every time. Specific buyers pay; browsers don't.
  • Structure is part of the value. Variables clearly marked, a one-line usage note per prompt, and expected output described. A pack that reads like documentation feels worth its price.
  • Update it and say so. You can edit your linklck content anytime. Models change, and "updated for the latest models" is a real differentiator for a text product.

See the whole flow on how linklck works. Prompt sellers often branch into code snippets and boilerplate or Notion templates.

Selling AI prompts: FAQ

How do buyers receive the prompts after paying?

On the unlock page itself. If you pasted your prompts into linklck as text or markdown, they're rendered right there the moment Stripe confirms payment, and the buyer copies them straight into ChatGPT, Claude, or Midjourney. If your pack lives in a doc or spreadsheet, the share link is revealed instead.

Can I sell prompts for any AI model?

Yes. ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Midjourney, Stable Diffusion. linklck doesn't care what the text is for. Model-agnostic packs (a workflow that works across chat models) tend to age better than packs tied to one model's quirks, and are easier to keep updated.

Aren't prompts easy to pirate once one person buys?

Any text product can be copied after purchase. That's true on every prompt marketplace too. In practice, prompt packs sell on trust and curation: buyers pay a few dollars to skip hours of trial and error from someone who's proven their results publicly. Keep prices modest, keep improving the pack, and casual sharing stays a rounding error.

What should I charge for a prompt pack?

Single deep, battle-tested mega-prompts sell for $5–$9. Curated packs of 10–50 prompts for a specific job (copywriting, coding review, image styles) go for $9–$29. Full prompt systems or libraries with instructions and examples run $29–$79. The niche and proof matter far more than prompt count.

Why linklck instead of a prompt marketplace?

Marketplaces take their cut and own the customer relationship, and your pack sits in a search-results grid next to a hundred competitors. With linklck you sell directly to the audience that already follows you, from one branded URL, with no monthly fee. The 15% flat fee includes payment processing, and a $10 sale credits you $8.50.

Your prompts are the product. Ship them.

Paste, price, publish. Free to start, 15% only when you sell.

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