Bridge Page
A bridge page is an intermediate page that connects a traffic source to an offer, pre-selling the visitor before handing them to the final landing page.

A bridge page is an intermediate web page that sits between a traffic source and an offer, bridging the gap by pre-selling the visitor and setting context before passing them to the final destination. It exists to make the handoff from ad to offer feel natural and to lift the conversion rate of traffic that would otherwise arrive cold.
How it works: the bridge page picks up the angle from the ad, adds a short layer of warming-up (a story, a comparison, social proof, or an explanation of the offer), and then links out to the merchant's or advertiser's page. In practice the term overlaps heavily with Pre-Lander; many marketers use the two interchangeably, though "bridge page" emphasizes the connecting role between source and offer, especially in affiliate setups where the affiliate cannot send traffic directly to a partner's page.
Bridge pages are frequently built as an Advertorial so the warming-up reads like editorial content rather than a hard pitch, before the user reaches the conversion-focused Landing Page.
Why it matters: done well, a bridge page improves compliance and qualifies clicks; done poorly or deceptively, it can violate network and platform policies. For competitive research, the bridge page reveals the messaging and proof a competitor relies on to convert, which is why capturing the full click path, not just the ad, matters.
Related terms: Pre-Lander, Advertorial, and Landing Page.

