Bluesky starter packs are the most underrated growth lever on the platform right now. While most creators are still chasing likes and reposts, a single well-crafted starter pack — or a well-timed inclusion in someone else’s — can drive hundreds of new followers in a matter of days. If you are serious about growing your audience on Bluesky, understanding how starter packs work is no longer optional.

What Are Bluesky Starter Packs?

A Bluesky starter pack is a curated collection of accounts and custom feeds grouped under a single shareable link. Think of it as a hand-picked welcome kit: someone opens your link, sees a list of recommended profiles, and can follow all of them with one tap. Bluesky introduced starter packs in mid-2024 as an onboarding tool, but their role has evolved well beyond that original purpose.

Today, starter packs function as discovery engines. They circulate on social media, in newsletters, and across communities. When a new user joins Bluesky, the platform suggests starter packs aligned with their interests. When an existing user wants to explore a new topic, they search for packs that match. Being listed in the right starter pack puts your account in front of a highly targeted, already-engaged audience — without any algorithm second-guessing your reach.

Each starter pack can include between 7 and 150 accounts, plus up to 3 custom feeds. The creator gives the pack a name, a short description, and publishes it. Bluesky generates a unique URL and QR code automatically.

How to Create Your Own Bluesky Starter Pack

Creating a Bluesky starter pack takes less than ten minutes, but the strategic decisions you make beforehand determine whether it gets shared a dozen times or a thousand times.

Step 1 — Define your niche clearly. The packs that spread are hyper-specific. « B2B SaaS Founders to Follow in 2026 » performs far better than « Interesting People on Bluesky ». The more targeted your pack’s identity, the more useful it is to a defined audience — and the more likely that audience is to share it.

Step 2 — Navigate to your profile and open the Starter Packs tab. From there, you can either let Bluesky auto-generate a pack based on your existing follows (useful as a starting point) or build one manually from scratch. Manual curation produces better results for strategic purposes.

Step 3 — Write a title and description that contain your target topic. These fields are indexed and searchable inside Bluesky. Treat the description the way you would treat a meta description: concise, informative, and keyword-aware.

Step 4 — Add accounts strategically. Include accounts your target audience already knows and respects. Mix well-known names with rising voices. Avoid padding the pack with inactive accounts — quality over quantity matters here. A pack of 20 excellent accounts outperforms a pack of 100 mediocre ones.

Step 5 — Optionally add up to 3 custom feeds. This is where starter packs become genuinely powerful. A well-built custom feed tied to your niche extends the value of the pack beyond just accounts and gives followers a ready-made content stream.

Step 6 — Publish and distribute. Share the link on Bluesky itself, but also outside the platform: LinkedIn posts, newsletter footers, community Slack groups, Reddit threads. The more entry points you create, the more the pack compounds over time.

How to Find and Use Bluesky Starter Packs

Finding the right starter packs is just as valuable as creating your own. Discovery is built into Bluesky’s onboarding flow, but several external tools have emerged to help users browse packs by category.

Inside the app, you can search by topic or browse suggestions on the Explore tab. Bluesky surfaces packs based on your existing interests and follow graph. For a broader search, third-party directories like blueskystarterpack.com let you filter by category — from SEO and marketing to art, journalism, and science — and see which packs are gaining traction.

When you open a starter pack link as an existing user, you are shown all the accounts and feeds in the pack. You can follow everything in one click or be selective. There is no obligation to follow the entire pack — it is a suggestion, not a forced subscription.

For new users, starter pack links double as onboarding shortcuts. Instead of spending hours searching for accounts to follow on an unfamiliar platform, they land in a pre-configured environment shaped around their interests. This dramatically reduces the « empty feed » problem that causes most new social media users to churn within the first week.

Using Bluesky Starter Packs as a Growth Strategy

Being included in a high-traffic starter pack is one of the fastest ways to gain followers on Bluesky without paid promotion. The mechanism is straightforward: a pack in your niche accumulates thousands of views, every viewer sees your account listed among trusted names, and a percentage clicks through and follows. Repeat across multiple packs, and the effect compounds.

The challenge is getting included. Pack creators are selective, and cold outreach asking to be added rarely works. The path that consistently produces results is built on three actions.

First, establish a clear niche identity before anything else. Accounts that post on one coherent topic are far more likely to get curated than generalist accounts. If you post about AI tools for freelancers, make that obvious in your bio, your pinned post, and your posting pattern. Pack creators need to understand your value at a glance.

Second, engage genuinely with the creators of packs you want to be included in. Reply to their posts, add something to the conversation, build a visible track record of interaction. This is not about flattery — it is about becoming a recognizable name in a niche community before you ask for anything.

Third, create your own starter packs and include those creators. Reciprocity is natural on Bluesky. When you curate a thoughtful pack that includes someone’s account, they often notice, and they often return the favor when building their next pack.

For brands and creators who want to go further, consider building a series of packs targeting different segments of your audience. A marketing agency might maintain one pack for brand strategists, another for content creators, and a third for startup founders. Each pack reaches a different slice of the platform and funnels relevant followers back to the same account. This approach pairs naturally with a broader social media performance strategy built around consistent niche authority.

Common Mistakes to Avoid with Starter Packs

The most common mistake is treating starter packs as a one-time action. You create one, share it once, and move on. Packs that perform well are updated regularly — accounts go inactive, better voices emerge, and fresh picks signal to followers that the pack is maintained and trustworthy.

A second mistake is over-stuffing. Packs of 150 accounts feel overwhelming. Most users will not scroll through all of them, and the accounts buried at the bottom get almost no visibility. Curating tightly — 15 to 40 accounts for most niches — keeps the pack scannable and increases the chance that every included account gets real attention.

A third mistake is neglecting the description. Many creators write vague two-word descriptions that tell the algorithm and the user nothing. A well-written description explains exactly who the pack is for and what they will get out of following these accounts. It is a short sales pitch for your curation judgment.

Finally, avoid creating packs that are thinly veiled self-promotion. Packs where the creator is the first account listed and every other account is a second-tier contact read as spam. The packs that build genuine authority are the ones where the creator has clearly thought about the reader’s experience, not their own follower count.

Bluesky Starter Packs and the Broader Platform Ecosystem

Starter packs do not exist in isolation. They work best when combined with the other discovery mechanisms Bluesky has built: custom feeds, the Explore tab, and the AT Protocol’s open social graph. A custom feed tied to a starter pack creates a self-reinforcing loop — new followers arrive via the pack and immediately have a curated feed to consume, which keeps them engaged and increases the chance they become active, returning users rather than passive follow-and-forget accounts.

Understanding how these tools interconnect is part of mastering the platform. The Bluesky features guide covers the full toolkit in detail, but starter packs are the entry point most creators should prioritize in 2026. The platform’s user base continues to grow, competition for attention is still low compared to saturated platforms, and the discovery infrastructure is mature enough to reward early, strategic investment.

The window where a modest starter pack can generate outsized results is open now. It will not stay open indefinitely. The creators who build pack equity today — through consistent niche posting, genuine community engagement, and smart curation — will hold a structural advantage as the platform scales. That is the core argument for treating Bluesky starter packs not as a minor tactic, but as a foundational piece of your 2026 social media presence.