Your sales page is where a curious reader turns into a customer. For digital products, it has an extra job: it must remove anxiety about delivery, access, and use rights—fast.

This guide gives you a simple, proven digital-product sales page template (with copy examples) you can adapt to anything from templates and fonts to ebooks, bundles, and memberships.

Quick definition: what is a digital product sales page?

A digital product sales page is a focused page designed to sell one specific downloadable product. It explains:

  • What it is (and who it’s for)
  • What’s included (deliverables, file types, access)
  • What problem it solves (outcomes)
  • Why it’s worth the price (value proof)
  • How delivery works (instant access, links, emails, portals)

The “above-the-fold” formula (what people must see first)

Before visitors scroll, they should instantly understand the offer and next step. Aim for:

  • Outcome headline (what changes for the buyer)
  • Subhead (who it’s for + what’s included)
  • Primary CTA button (Buy / Get instant access)
  • Micro-proof (a line of credibility or a specific benefit)

Headline examples

  • “Launch a polished brand kit in 30 minutes (with templates you can reuse forever)”
  • “A plug-and-play Notion dashboard for creators who want a simple weekly workflow”
  • “The printable planner bundle that makes your next 90 days feel organized again”

Digital product sales page template (copy + section order)

You can use this exact order for most digital products.

1) Hero section: outcome + CTA

  • Headline: outcome + timeframe
  • Subhead: who it’s for, what’s included (1 sentence)
  • CTA: “Get instant access” / “Download now”
  • Price anchor (optional): “$29 one-time” / “From $9”

2) Problem + agitation (keep it respectful)

Name the frustration your reader is already feeling, then show the cost of staying stuck.

  • “If you keep starting from scratch, you’ll keep losing weekends to setup work.”
  • “If your product is unclear, people hesitate—even if it’s genuinely good.”

3) What you get (deliverables list)

This section reduces refunds. Be specific:

  • Files included (ex: 25 Canva templates, 10 PNGs, 1 PDF guide)
  • Compatibility (Canva free/pro, Notion, Google Docs, etc.)
  • Access method (download link, email delivery, portal)

Tip: If you haven’t written a crisp product summary yet, use this guide on writing a digital product description that converts.

4) How it works (delivery + setup)

Digital products sell faster when delivery feels effortless. Explain the buyer journey in 3–5 steps.

  • Buy securely
  • Get instant access (download page + email)
  • Open files / duplicate template
  • Start using it today

If you sell downloads, you’ll also want a delivery checklist: Automatic digital download delivery (setup checklist).

5) Benefits (outcomes, not features)

For each feature, translate it into a benefit. Example:

  • Feature: “12-page onboarding workbook” → Benefit: “Spend less time guessing and more time taking action.”
  • Feature: “Editable templates” → Benefit: “Make it yours without redesigning from zero.”

6) Social proof + trust

If you don’t have testimonials yet, use alternatives:

  • Before/after screenshots
  • Mini case study (“Here’s what I used this for…”)
  • Credibility indicators (years, clients, press, downloads)

7) Pricing + guarantee/refund policy

Clarity beats cleverness. Use one primary option when possible. If you’re unsure how to set pricing, start with this framework: How to price digital products (simple framework).

8) License + usage rights (critical for templates, fonts, art)

Spell out what’s allowed. This reduces back-and-forth and protects you. If you need a clean breakdown, see: Digital product licensing: personal vs commercial use.

9) FAQ (handle objections)

  • “Do I need special software?” List compatibility and alternatives.
  • “Can I get a refund?” State your policy plainly.
  • “Can I use this for clients?” Tie back to the license section.
  • “What if I can’t download?” Explain support + re-download access.

10) Final CTA + next step

Close with a short recap and a confident CTA. Example:

  • 1 line: who it’s for
  • 1 line: what they’ll get
  • Button: “Get instant access”

Where to place CTAs (simple rule)

  • Top: primary CTA in the hero
  • Middle: CTA after “What you get” (people are convinced here)
  • Bottom: final CTA after FAQ

Internal link ideas (to keep readers moving)

If you’re building a digital products content hub, these internal links work well on sales-page posts:

Sales page checklist (copy/paste)

  • Outcome headline + clear CTA above the fold
  • Deliverables list includes file types + compatibility
  • Delivery explained in 3–5 steps
  • Pricing section is simple + explicit
  • License/usage rights included (when relevant)
  • FAQ addresses refunds, software, access, support
  • 3 CTAs: top, mid, bottom
  • 3–5 contextual internal links

Next step: Pick one product, draft the page using the template above, then run a quick “clarity pass.” If a friend can’t explain what the buyer gets in one sentence, tighten the hero and deliverables list.