Notion Nested Pages

Nested pages are pages placed inside other pages. This structure works like folders inside folders on a computer. It helps you organize large amounts of content without clutter.

Why Nesting Helps

A single flat list of pages becomes hard to scan as it grows. Nesting groups related pages under one parent. You open the parent page to see only the relevant children, which keeps each screen focused on one topic at a time.

Flat List vs Nested Structure

Flat ListNested Structure
Math NotesSchool
Science Notes   Math Notes
History Notes   Science Notes
    History Notes

Creating a Nested Page

Open a parent page and type a forward slash. Select Page from the menu to insert a new sub-page. This sub-page now lives inside the parent and appears as a clickable link. You can also create a nested page directly from the sidebar by hovering over a page and clicking the plus icon beside it.

How Deep Nesting Can Go

Notion allows pages inside pages inside pages with no strict limit. A school workspace could nest a subject inside a semester inside a school year. Going too deep makes navigation slow, so most users stop at three or four levels.

Breadcrumbs for Navigation

The top of every nested page shows a breadcrumb trail. This trail lists the parent pages above the current page. Click any name in the trail to jump back up the structure instead of using the sidebar or the back button repeatedly.

Breadcrumb Example

Breadcrumb Trail
School / 2026 / Math Notes

Moving Pages Between Parents

Drag a page in the sidebar and drop it onto a different parent page. This relocates the page without deleting its content. Links pointing to that page continue working after the move, since Notion tracks the page by its internal identity rather than its location.

Designing a Nesting Strategy

Decide your top-level categories before adding many pages, since restructuring later takes more effort than planning ahead. A workspace might use top-level pages for Work, Personal, and Archive, with everything else nested inside one of these three. This mirrors the same planning a filing cabinet needs before you start dropping in folders.

When to Avoid Nesting

Avoid nesting a page too deep if you access it daily. Deep nesting adds extra clicks to reach frequent content. Use the Favorites feature instead for pages you open often, keeping the nested structure for reference material you visit less frequently.

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