Confluence Page Hierarchy
Page hierarchy is the parent-child relationship between pages inside a space. A well-built hierarchy lets anyone find information in seconds — even someone who has never opened the space before. A poorly built hierarchy turns your space into a labyrinth.
Parent and Child Pages
Every page in Confluence can be either a parent, a child, or both. A parent page sits above child pages in the sidebar tree. A child page sits beneath its parent. One page can be both — it can be a child of a page above it and a parent of pages below it.
Family Tree Model
ENGINEERING SPACE
│
└── 📄 Architecture Overview ← parent page
│
├── 📄 Backend Architecture ← child page (also a parent below)
│ ├── 📄 Database Design
│ └── 📄 API Layer
│
└── 📄 Frontend Architecture ← child page
├── 📄 Component Library
└── 📄 Routing Strategy
The sidebar mirrors this tree structure. Readers expand a parent page to reveal its children, just like opening a folder on a computer.
Creating a Child Page
Two methods create a child page directly beneath a parent.
Method Comparison
METHOD 1: Sidebar Button ─────────────────────────────────────────────────── Hover over any page in the sidebar → A + icon appears to the right → Click + to create a child page immediately METHOD 2: From Inside a Page ─────────────────────────────────────────────────── Open the parent page → Click Create in the top bar → The new page automatically becomes a child of the page you were viewing
Moving Pages in the Hierarchy
You can move any page to a different position in the hierarchy at any time. The page keeps all its content, comments, and history. Only its position in the tree changes.
How to Move a Page
STEP 1 → Open the page you want to move
STEP 2 → Click … (more actions) in the top-right
STEP 3 → Select "Move"
STEP 4 → Choose the new parent page from the picker
STEP 5 → Click Move
RESULT: The page and all its children move together.
All existing links to this page still work.
Hierarchy Depth — How Deep Is Too Deep?
Confluence supports unlimited nesting levels, but deep nesting confuses readers. If someone needs to click open five levels just to find a page, the hierarchy is too deep.
Depth Guide
LEVELS DEEP SITUATION RECOMMENDATION ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── 1-2 levels Small teams, simple content Ideal 3 levels Medium teams, structured content Acceptable 4 levels Large teams, complex projects Limit carefully 5+ levels — Redesign the structure
Real Example: Good vs Overcomplicated
GOOD (3 levels max) OVERCOMPLICATED (5 levels)
──────────────────────────────────── ─────────────────────────────────
HR Space HR Space
└── Policies └── Documents
├── Leave Policy └── Policies
└── Remote Work Policy └── HR Policies
└── Leave
└── Leave Policy
The Space Homepage as the Root
Every space has a homepage. This homepage is the root — the top-level page that all other pages descend from. Do not bury important pages deep in the tree if they are accessed frequently. Move high-traffic pages to a higher level.
Space Root Diagram
SPACE HOMEPAGE (root)
│
├── 📄 Team Handbook ← frequently accessed → keep at level 1
├── 📄 Projects ← container page
│ ├── 📄 Project Alpha
│ └── 📄 Project Beta
└── 📄 Meeting Notes ← container page
├── 📄 Jan 2025
└── 📄 Feb 2025
Organising with Page Trees
A useful pattern is the "container page" approach. Create a page whose only job is to sit as a parent and link to its children. It holds no real content itself — it simply organises child pages beneath it.
Container Page Example
📄 Meeting Notes (container page — no body content) │ │ Body of page: "See meeting notes below, sorted by month." │ ├── 📄 March 2025 Meeting Notes ├── 📄 April 2025 Meeting Notes └── 📄 May 2025 Meeting Notes
You can add the Children Display macro to a container page so it automatically lists all child pages as clickable links. This turns the container page into a self-updating index that never needs manual editing.
Hierarchy and Search
Hierarchy helps search as well as navigation. When you search Confluence, results show the full path of each page — including its parent and grandparent. A clear hierarchy makes search results immediately recognisable.
Search Result Path Example
SEARCH TERM: "leave policy" RESULT: 📄 Leave Policy HR Space › Policies › Leave Policy Last updated: Priya Sharma · 3 days ago
The path HR Space › Policies › Leave Policy tells you exactly where the page lives before you even click on it.
