Podcast websites

A podcast website gives a show a home that exists independently of the streaming platforms where most people listen. It is the place where new listeners discover the show through search, where existing listeners find show notes and resources, and where the podcast builds an audience relationship that no platform can take away.

Every podcast on a streaming platform is subject to that platform's rules, algorithm, and continued existence. The show's presence there belongs to the platform, not to the podcaster. A podcast website changes that. It creates an owned digital asset where the audience belongs to the creator, where search engines can index the content, and where listeners can be converted into email subscribers who are reachable directly.

A podcast website is also the most effective tool a podcast has for attracting new listeners who are not already on a streaming platform. Search engines do not index audio files on platforms the same way they index text-based web pages. A website with transcripts, show notes, and episode summaries can rank for the topics the podcast covers and bring in listeners who would never have found the show through a platform alone.

What is a podcast website?

A podcast website is a website built to represent a podcast and its episodes online. It typically includes an episode library with show notes, transcripts, and embedded audio players; information about the host or hosts; a way for listeners to subscribe or follow; and links to the platforms where the podcast is available. For many podcasters, the website also serves as a hub for related content, merchandise, sponsorship inquiries, and community interaction.

Podcast websites differ from general blog websites in that the primary content is audio rather than written. The website supports and extends the audio content rather than replacing it, though many podcast websites also publish written content around their episodes to improve search visibility and serve listeners who prefer to read.

Who uses podcast websites?

Podcast websites are used by podcasters across every genre and audience size:

  • Independent creators producing shows on topics ranging from true crime to business strategy to personal development
  • Brands and businesses using a podcast as part of a content marketing strategy
  • Media organizations and publishers extending their editorial brand into audio
  • Interview and conversation series hosts building an audience around their guests and discussions
  • Educational and professional development podcasts serving niche audiences in specific fields

The website serves the same essential purpose regardless of whether the podcast has 500 listeners or 500,000: an owned presence that is not dependent on any platform for its continued existence.

What makes a podcast website different from other websites?

A podcast website primarily promotes content that lives off-site. The audio files are hosted on a podcast hosting platform, and the listening happens on streaming apps. The website's role is to represent the show, provide context for each episode, and convert visitors into subscribers across those external platforms.

This means the podcast website needs to be optimized for discovery and conversion in a specific way. A visitor who lands on an episode page from a search result may never have heard the show before. The page needs to communicate what the show is, why this episode is worth listening to, and where the visitor can subscribe, all before they leave. Show notes and transcripts that make each episode findable in search are therefore among the most valuable content the website can publish.

What does a podcast website need to work well?

An organized episode library

Listeners who discover one episode and enjoy it should be able to browse the full catalog and find episodes on topics that interest them. A searchable or browsable episode library with clear titles, guest names where relevant, and brief summaries of each episode's content makes the archive navigable and encourages deeper engagement with the show.

Show notes and transcripts for each episode

Show notes provide the context that audio cannot: links to resources mentioned in the episode, guest bios, key takeaways, and timestamps for different topics covered. Transcripts make each episode fully searchable by text, significantly improving the episode's search visibility and serving listeners who are deaf or hard of hearing or who prefer to read. Together, these elements make each episode page a genuinely useful web page rather than just an audio player with a title.

Clear subscription paths

The primary goal of a podcast website for most creators is to grow the subscriber base. Prominent links to the show on all major streaming platforms, a direct RSS feed link for podcast apps, and an email subscription form for a newsletter all give visitors multiple ways to stay connected. An email list is particularly valuable because it provides a direct channel to the audience that is not subject to platform algorithm changes.

A compelling host or show identity

New visitors who arrive without prior knowledge of the show need a quick answer to the question: what is this and is it for me? A clear show description, host biography, and a featured episode recommendation all help orient a first-time visitor and give them a reason to start listening.

Frequently asked questions

Do podcasters need their own website if they are already on all the major streaming platforms?

What should be included in podcast show notes?

How do podcast websites get found in search?

Should a podcast website include a full transcript for every episode?

Can a podcast website also sell products or courses?

What is the difference between a podcast website and a podcast hosting platform?