Open your blog post
Pull up any post on your blog, or any page with an image worth pinning. Pinterpost is right there in your Chrome sidebar, one tap from Pinterest.
Right-click your featured image, or any image on your post. Pinterpost designs the pins, writes the SEO, links each one back to your blog, and auto-publishes.
Start for $1 · Cancel anytime
A post slides out of social feeds in a day, but on Pinterest it can pull readers for months, as long as each post has more than one pin working for it. Pinterpost is a Chrome extension that turns any blog image into up to 30 distinct pins, each angled at a different search, writes the Pinterest SEO, links every pin back to your post, and auto-publishes to your board. One post becomes months of search traffic.
One pin can pull readers for months, but only if each post has enough pins working in search. That is the grind:
It turns one post into a batch of pins.
Right-click any image in your post. It handles the grind in one sitting:
No new tab, no downloads, no manual layout. Pinterpost works right next to the post you're already on.
Pull up any post on your blog, or any page with an image worth pinning. Pinterpost is right there in your Chrome sidebar, one tap from Pinterest.
Right-click or hover your featured image and click Recreate. No saving, no exporting, no switching tabs. Pinterpost grabs the image instantly.
Pull a style from a Pinterest board or drop in your own Canva template, so every pin matches your blog's look. Add a prompt if you want a specific angle.
Pinterpost designs up to 30 pins in under 60 seconds. Each one links back to your post, then publish or schedule the batch straight to your Pinterest boards.
Pull a photo straight from your post, your media library, or a Canva template. No exporting, downloading, or switching tabs.
Match keeps every pin on your blog's fonts and colors, Remix riffs on it, Inspire borrows the vibe. You set how far each one goes.
Each pin gets a keyword title, description, and alt text aimed at what readers in your niche search on Pinterest.
Turn a single post into up to 30 distinct pins in under 60 seconds, each able to target a different search.
Set your post URL once and Pinterpost points the whole batch at your blog, so every pin sends the reader to you.
Turn on auto-publish and Pinterpost posts the batch to your board for you, now or at a scheduled time, with no manual posting.
| Without Pinterpost | With Pinterpost | |
|---|---|---|
| Reach per post | One or two pins | Up to 30 in search |
| Old posts | Forgotten in the archive | Back in front of readers |
| Posting | Manual, one by one | Auto-published for you |
Each variant can chase a different search, so a single post becomes dozens of doorways into your blog instead of one.
Pinterest is its own visual search engine, so your posts surface to people who would never have found you through Google alone.
Pins keep pulling readers without ad spend, so one core update can't quietly wipe out a season of your traffic.
A fresh batch puts older posts in front of searchers again, so your back catalog keeps earning, not just this week's post.
Pinterest is slow-burn search, so a scheduled batch keeps sending readers long after you hit publish.
Pinterest stops being a second job, so the hours go back into the posts themselves instead of the promo.
Bloggers get traffic from Pinterest by publishing pins that link back to their posts and surfacing when people search. It works because Pinterest behaves like a visual search engine, not a feed: Pinterest reports that 96% of top searches are unbranded, so readers arrive hunting for a recipe, a room makeover, or a how-to and click whoever answers best, even a brand-new blog.
That search behavior rewards consistency and volume. A single pin per post rarely gets traction, and because a pin keeps resurfacing in search for months, the work compounds. A steady stream of fresh variants, each with a different title and keyword angle, gives the algorithm more surface area to rank and more ways to send a reader to your post. Pinterpost makes that volume effortless, turning one post into a batch of pins instead of one.
Yes. For many bloggers Pinterest is the largest source of referral traffic outside Google, and it is still growing: it reached 631 million monthly active users in Q1 2026. Unlike a social feed that buries a post within hours, a pin keeps surfacing in search for months, so the traffic compounds long after you hit publish.
What changed is that one pin per post no longer works. Pinterest now favors fresh, distinct pins over recycled ones, so the bloggers still winning are the ones publishing many different pins per post on a steady cadence. That used to mean hours in a design tool; Pinterpost makes it realistic by generating a whole batch from a single post.
There is no fixed number, but several distinct pins per post beats a single one. Each variant can target a different angle of the same post, so one recipe can rank for "gluten-free dinner", "quick family meal", and "meal-prep idea" at once. The key word is distinct: different designs and copy, not the same pin posted twice.
Pinterpost is built for that. From one post image it designs up to 30 different pins, each with its own title and description, all linking back to the same post. You generate the batch once, and because each pin is its own search entry, a distinct pin can keep surfacing for readers for months after you publish.
Yes. Fresh pins are one of the best ways to revive an old post. Pinterest favors new pins, even when they point to existing content, so a new design for a year-old recipe can put that post back in front of searchers without you writing anything new.
This is where volume pays off without extra writing. Open an old post, recreate its image, and Pinterpost generates a fresh batch of pins that link to it. You keep your back catalog working instead of letting it go quiet after the first week.
No, as long as the pins are genuinely different. The tactic Pinterest cracked down on was the old blogger habit of blasting one identical pin to twenty group boards at once. What it rewards now is fresh, distinct pins, so thirty different designs for one post sit on the right side of that line, while thirty copies of one pin do not.
Pinterpost is built around that distinction. Every variant is a different design, title, and description, so you avoid the duplicate-image signal Pinterest penalizes. Because you choose when each batch publishes, you can space your pins out instead of firing them all at once, so you get the volume the algorithm rewards without the rapid-fire pattern.
The best Pinterest pin size is a 2:3 vertical ratio, 1000 by 1500 pixels. This trips up bloggers because a blog featured image is usually wide (16:9) and shrinks to nothing in a vertical feed, so it has to be rebuilt into a tall pin, usually with a text overlay naming the post, before it performs.
Pinterpost does that rebuild for you. It reshapes your post image into properly sized vertical pins, adds readable title text, and outputs every variant ready to publish, so you never open an editor to crop a featured image into shape.
Pinterpost folds four separate jobs into one right-click: designing the pin, writing the Pinterest SEO, linking back to your post, and scheduling it. The usual approach stitches those across a design tool, manual keyword research, copy-paste link work, and a separate scheduler.
| Step | Piece by piece | Pinterpost |
|---|---|---|
| Design the pin | Lay it out by hand in a design tool | Generated from your post image |
| Write the SEO | Research keywords, write each title and description | Written for you, per pin |
| Link to your post | Paste the URL onto every pin | Applied across the whole batch |
| Schedule and publish | Export, then schedule in a separate app like Tailwind | Auto-published to your board |
| Where it runs | Several tabs and tools | The post you're already on |
Already have a Canva template you love? Drop it in as a style reference and Pinterpost multiplies it into on-brand variants, then handles the SEO, links, and scheduling around it.
No. Publishing many distinct pins is normal blogger behavior; what Pinterest flags is duplicate pins and rapid bulk dumping, not volume on its own. Every pin Pinterpost makes is a different design, title, and description, so you avoid the duplicate signal, and you choose when each batch publishes, so you can space your pins out instead of posting them all at once.
About a minute to set up. Install Pinterpost, connect Pinterest in one tap, then right-click an image on your post. Your first batch can be generated and scheduled in the same session.
No. Pinterpost designs every pin for you from a blog image, so design skills are optional. If you already have a Canva template, drop it in as a reference and Pinterpost multiplies it into on-brand variants.
Yes. You set the destination URL once and Pinterpost applies your post link across the whole batch. It works with any blog platform, WordPress, Squarespace, Ghost, Substack, or your own site, because the link is just a URL.
Try everything for $1 over 3 days, which includes 10 pins. After that, plans start at $29/mo for 50 pins on the Starter plan. Cancel anytime during the trial.
Right-click a post image. Ship 30 pins that link back to you. Pinterest traffic in days, not months.
$1 to start · Cancel anytime · Works on Chrome, Edge, Brave