Klaviyo Popups: What They Can (And Can’t) Do in 2026
By Marcus Espersen Growth Manager
@ Sleeknote

If you’re running email marketing on Klaviyo, you’ve set up a sign-up form. (Klaviyo’s official name for popups.) You’re collecting emails. Your welcome flow runs. Things are working.

But you suspect you’re leaving subscribers on the table.

You’re right.

Klaviyo’s built-in popups handle the basics. Timed delays, simple URL targeting, basic A/B testing, an okay native sync with your email flows. But they hit a hard ceiling on the features that move opt-in rates from 1-2% to 8-10% and beyond:

  • Gamification stops at Spin to Win. No scratchcards, no seasonal calendars, no quiz-with-outcome flows.
  • You can’t drop product recommendations or videos into a Klaviyo popup.
  • Templates are basic. Mostly text, image, and button layouts.
  • Quiz answers don’t auto-route subscribers into Klaviyo segments by outcome.

And here’s the bigger truth. For Klaviyo, popups are one feature in a sprawling email and SMS platform. For Sleeknote, popups are the entire product. We’ve been building them for 11+ years.

Below, you’ll get a capability-by-capability breakdown of what Klaviyo’s popups can do, what they can’t, and the signals that mean you’ve outgrown them.

No how-to tutorials. Just the honest assessment Klaviyo’s docs won’t write.

Table of Contents

Does Klaviyo Have Built-in Popups?

Yes. Klaviyo includes a native form builder in every plan, including the free tier. The product officially calls them “sign-up forms,” but most marketers just call them Klaviyo popups.

Five formats are available: popup (modal overlay, center-screen), full page (a takeover that fills the entire screen), flyout (corner slide-in), embed (inline form on the page), and banner (a horizontal bar at the top or bottom of the screen).

That covers the standard layouts. What it misses are sidebars (slide-ins from the middle left or right of the screen that stay visible while the visitor scrolls) and middle-side positions. Both are standard in Sleeknote, and both convert well for product-page traffic where you want the campaign to ride alongside the content.

The bigger structural difference shows up in the philosophy. Klaviyo’s popups are bundled into a broader email and SMS platform. Sleeknote’s entire 11-year focus has been on what popups can do for ecommerce stores. So the depth lives in different places.

For a small store running a simple welcome offer, native is fine. The question is what happens when you outgrow it.

Can Klaviyo Run A/B Tests on Popups?

Yes. Klaviyo includes native A/B testing on sign-up forms with two to four variants per test.

You can test headlines, images, button colors, and field configurations. Klaviyo splits traffic evenly and reports basic metrics: views, submissions, submission rate.

What it doesn’t include:

  • Statistical significance calculation (you eyeball it)
  • Multivariate testing (test one variable at a time, period)
  • Holdout groups
  • Auto-winner selection
  • Per-segment A/B test results

For most stores, single-variable A/B testing is fine. You’d want more if you’re running a sophisticated CRO program.

The bigger issue isn’t features. It’s velocity. A/B testing in Klaviyo requires duplicating campaigns manually, then waiting for enough data to decide. Dedicated tools surface winning patterns faster because that’s the workflow they’re built around, not a side feature inside an email platform.

How Advanced Is Klaviyo’s Popup Targeting?

Klaviyo’s targeting has real depth. You can target by visitor location, device type, list and segment membership, URL, UTM parameters, cart contents, and Klaviyo profile data. You can stack conditions with AND logic (“show only when all selected rules are met”), set scroll-based or timed delays, fire on click or via custom JavaScript, and control display frequency for visitors who’ve already seen the form.

That covers more scenarios than people expect. Returning subscriber with a specific product in cart, on a specific URL pattern, after scrolling 50%? Targetable.

What’s harder to do in Klaviyo’s form builder:

  • Compose conditions with OR logic across rules (you only get AND)
  • Push custom session data into the popup via Google Tag Manager (SiteData-style behavior)
  • Schedule campaigns by business hours, fixed dates, or recurring patterns
  • Layer per-impression limits across multiple campaigns at the account level

Those gaps matter for stores doing serious personalization or seasonal automation. SiteData specifically is what lets you trigger a popup based on signals Klaviyo’s form builder doesn’t natively see, like “viewed three products in the same category this session” or “watched 50% of the explainer video.”

Sleeknote’s targeting engine has 13+ stackable conditions including OR logic, SiteData support, and advanced scheduling. And it sends Signup Source attribution back to Klaviyo so your flows know exactly which popup converted each subscriber.

Can Klaviyo Popups Be Gamified?

Barely. Klaviyo recently added Spin to Win, and that’s where the gamification story ends.

No Scratch to Win. No Seasonal Calendars. No Daily Offers. No quiz-as-popup formats. No Multiple Choice Quiz outcomes that branch by score.

That matters because gamification consistently doubles opt-in rates, and the format you pick changes the lift.

Look at Monis. A Danish ecommerce brand selling exotic pet food and supplies, running on Shopify and Klaviyo. They replaced their standard signup form (converting at 2%) with a Spin to Win campaign through Sleeknote, then layered a Christmas Calendar on top for December.

The numbers:

  • 4x higher conversion rate from visitor to subscriber (2% → 8.75%)
  • 80-90% of subscribers completed Step 2 to add SMS permission
  • 13.79% conversion rate from the Christmas Calendar popup
  • 1,500%+ revenue growth since implementing Sleeknote in 2020
Monis Spin to Win popup collecting email and SMS with Sleeknote
Monis Christmas Calendar popup created with Sleeknote

Both campaigns synced new subscribers straight into Klaviyo for the welcome flow. The Spin to Win you can technically run inside Klaviyo today. The Christmas Calendar, the Multiple Choice Quiz, the Scratch to Win, the Daily Offers, the multistep that captures both email and SMS in one flow. None of those exist in Klaviyo’s product.

Sleeknote ships six gamification modules in the same drag-and-drop editor. And more are on the roadmap.

Can Klaviyo Build Multi-Step Popups or Quiz-Style Flows?

Yes, with limits. Klaviyo’s multistep sign-up forms support up to four pages, plus an optional success page. You can capture an email at Step 1 and ask follow-up questions in subsequent steps.

That covers the basic multistep use case. What it doesn’t do is route subscribers into Klaviyo segments by quiz outcome.

A “what’s your skin type?” quiz that branches a subscriber into a “dry skin” Klaviyo segment based on their answer (then triggers a dry-skin-specific welcome flow) isn’t a Klaviyo native feature. Same for Spin to Win style outcome distribution that maps prize codes back to Klaviyo profiles.

Sleeknote’s Quiz module and Multiple Choice Quiz module add outcome-based logic and auto-create Klaviyo custom properties from the answers. So if a visitor answers “dry skin” in your popup, that becomes a Klaviyo profile attribute the moment they subscribe. Your flows can use it for segmentation right away.

Multistep popup example

And 76% of users who complete Step 1 of a Sleeknote multistep also complete Step 2. So you’re capturing both the email and the zero-party data downstream of it, with low drop-off between steps.

For quiz funnels, lead qualification, or any flow where the answer should drive the segment, Klaviyo’s native multistep isn’t built for it.

Can Klaviyo Popups Include Product Recommendations or Videos?

No to both.

Klaviyo’s popup builder doesn’t have a product recommendation block. You can manually paste a static image of a featured product, but you can’t pull live recommendations from your store catalog. And you can’t drop an embedded video into a Klaviyo popup either.

Both formats matter for higher-converting popups. Product recommendations turn an email-capture moment into a discovery moment. A video can demonstrate a product, explain a quiz, or build trust faster than a paragraph of copy.

Sleeknote integrates with six product recommendation engines out of the box: Clerk, Raptor, Hello Retail, Relewise, Shopify product collections, and custom uploads. Two display styles (Slide and Card flip animation), drag-and-drop into any campaign. Embedded videos are supported as a native block. No code required.

Video embed on popup example.

If your popup strategy involves anything beyond text and a button, this is where Klaviyo’s form builder runs out of road.

How Customizable Is the Design of a Klaviyo Popup?

Klaviyo offers 70+ form templates with a drag-and-drop editor. You can change colors, fonts, button styling, and add background images. Custom CSS is possible but requires switching to the HTML editor.

The templates themselves are basic. Most are simple text-and-button layouts with a single image. They get the job done if your only goal is capturing an email. They don’t get you a popup that feels on-brand for a design-led store.

That’s the constraint. You can’t do layered designs. Custom animations are limited. Video backgrounds aren’t native. And the mobile customization options are thinner than desktop.

Dedicated popup tools assume design control is the point. Sleeknote’s editor lets you customize every element with the same flexibility as a landing page builder, and changes preview in real time across desktop and mobile.

If your brand is design-led, the visual gap matters more than it looks.

What’s a Good Conversion Rate for a Klaviyo Popup?

Industry benchmarks for Klaviyo-style native popups land in the 1.5-3% range. Top performers hit 5-7%.

That’s the baseline. With dedicated popup tools and the right tactics, benchmark conversion rates climb considerably:

  • Standard popups: 3-5% (industry average for dedicated tools)
  • Exit-intent campaigns: 5-15%
  • Spin-to-Win and gamified campaigns: 8-43%+ (per Sleeknote case studies on Monis at 8.75% and Onyx Cookware at 43.03%)
  • Quiz-based with zero-party data: 15-50%

So if your Klaviyo popup is converting at 1.5%, you’re hitting Klaviyo’s expected range. But you’re also leaving 70-90% of potential subscribers on the table compared to what’s possible with the right tools.

The question isn’t whether your popup is performing for Klaviyo’s standards. It’s whether it’s performing for your business.

When Should You Switch From Klaviyo’s Popups to a Dedicated Tool?

There are six signals. If two or more match your situation, native isn’t enough.

1. You want gamification beyond Spin to Win. Scratch to Win, Seasonal Calendars, Daily Offers, quiz-style outcome flows. Klaviyo doesn’t ship them.

2. You want product recommendations or videos in your popup. Neither is possible inside Klaviyo’s form builder.

3. Your popup conversion rate is plateaued. If you’ve optimized headlines, images, and offers in Klaviyo and you’re still under 3-4%, you’ve hit the tool’s ceiling, not yours.

4. You want quiz outcomes that route subscribers into Klaviyo segments. Klaviyo’s multistep collects answers, but doesn’t auto-create profile properties or branch by outcome.

5. You need on-brand design. Template-bound popups don’t fit design-led brands.

6. You want SiteData, OR logic, or advanced scheduling in your targeting. Klaviyo’s targeting handles basic AND composition, but stops short of custom session signals via Google Tag Manager, OR logic, and business-hours scheduling.

What’s the Best Popup Tool That Integrates With Klaviyo?

Three options are worth considering. Each integrates natively with Klaviyo, but they make different trade-offs.

Sleeknote. Best for ecommerce brands that want gamification depth, design freedom, and product recommendations alongside Klaviyo. Six gamification modules (Spin to Win, Scratch to Win, Seasonal Calendar, Daily Offers, Quiz, Multiple Choice Quiz). 13+ stackable targeting conditions with SiteData and OR logic. Six native product recommendation engines. Native Klaviyo integration with Signup Source attribution and auto-created custom properties from quiz answers. Visitor-based pricing starting at €49/month, with unlimited campaigns, domains, and users on every plan.

Wisepops. Polished editor, strong brand following in Europe. Two trade-offs to keep in mind. Wisepops charges by pageview rather than visitor, and pageviews scale roughly four times faster than visitors as your store grows. And mobile popups can fire as full-screen overlays, which Google flags as intrusive interstitials and uses against your mobile rankings. Wisepops has been moving upmarket too, with new pricing tiers built around enterprise budgets.

Justuno. Best for stores with a dedicated CRO team and a deep need for AI-driven product recommendations. Powerful but with a steeper learning curve. The best features sit on higher-priced tiers, so the entry-level sticker price rarely reflects what stores actually pay.

For most ecommerce brands running Klaviyo, Sleeknote is the most natural pairing. The gamification depth, the product recommendations, the quiz outcomes that flow into Klaviyo profiles, and the Signup Source attribution solve the biggest gaps in Klaviyo’s native popups.

How Does Sleeknote Integrate With Klaviyo?

The integration is native. New popup signups land in your Klaviyo profiles in real time. Signup-source attribution flows through so your welcome and segmentation logic knows which popup converted each visitor.

Specifically:

  • Email signups sync immediately to a Klaviyo list of your choice
  • Custom properties from your popup (quiz answers, preferences, location) are sent as Klaviyo profile fields
  • Property names must match exactly (Klaviyo is case-sensitive on this)
  • Quiz responses from Sleeknote’s Quiz module auto-create Klaviyo custom properties
  • Signup Source is supported, so you can build flows triggered by “subscribed via Sleeknote Spin to Win”

Setup takes about five minutes. You generate a Klaviyo API key, paste it into Sleeknote, choose the target list, and map any custom fields. Sleeknote handles the rest.

For most stores, this means you keep your existing Klaviyo flows, segments, and templates exactly as they are. The popup layer just gets dramatically better. Monis is the proof point: same Klaviyo setup, replaced the popup layer with Sleeknote, and grew their email list 4x while driving 1,500%+ revenue growth since 2020.

The Bottom Line

Klaviyo’s popups get you started. They cover the basics, integrate cleanly with your email flows, and they’re free with your Klaviyo subscription. For early-stage stores, that’s a reasonable starting point.

But when you need gamification beyond Spin to Win, product recommendations and videos in your popups, quiz outcomes that route subscribers into Klaviyo segments, or design control that fits your brand, you’ve outgrown native.

That’s where a dedicated tool earns its place.

Here’s the difference in simple terms. For Klaviyo, popups are a feature. They get attention when they get attention. For Sleeknote, popups have been the entire product for 11+ years. Six gamification modules, 13+ stackable targeting conditions with SiteData and OR logic, six product recommendation engines, and a Klaviyo integration built around how you actually attribute signups.

And we’re not slowing down. More gamification modules are on the way, and web push notifications are rolling out next.

Ready to see what your popup conversion rate could actually be?

Start a 14-day free trial of Sleeknote. All features included, no credit card required. See for yourself.

Start Free Trial

FAQ

Yes, on Klaviyo’s free plan and every paid tier. There’s no separate fee for sign-up forms. Your only cost is your Klaviyo subscription itself, which scales with profiles and SMS sends. That makes Klaviyo’s native popups a low-friction starting point. The trade-off is the feature ceiling, and once you outgrow it, the upgrade conversation is about a dedicated popup tool, not a more expensive Klaviyo plan.

Yes, with two caveats. Exit-intent triggers don’t fire on mobile because phones and tablets don’t have a cursor. And full-screen mobile popups risk Google’s intrusive interstitial penalty if they cover the main content without a user-initiated action. Sleeknote handles this by showing visitors a small teaser tab at the screen edge. They tap it to open the popup, which protects your mobile SEO rankings.

Yes. Klaviyo lets you trigger a sign-up form when a visitor moves to leave the page. It’s desktop only, since exit-intent depends on cursor tracking that doesn’t exist on touch devices. The trigger itself is basic and can’t easily combine with conditional rules like “fire only if cart value is above $50.” For exit-intent that stacks with cart, segment, and behavioral conditions, a dedicated popup tool gives you the composition.

Yes. Klaviyo’s multistep sign-up forms can capture both email and SMS permissions in the same flow. The bigger question is what you do with the second step. Sleeknote’s multistep does the same collection and syncs both opt-ins into Klaviyo profiles, with strong Step 2 completion rates. Monis collected 80-90% SMS opt-ins through their Sleeknote multistep on Klaviyo while converting 8.75% overall.

About five minutes. You generate a Klaviyo API key, paste it into Sleeknote, choose the target list, and map any custom fields you want synced. New signups land in your Klaviyo profiles immediately, with the Signup Source property included so you can attribute revenue back to each popup. Property names are case-sensitive in Klaviyo, so match them exactly during setup.

For most stores, yes. Sleeknote customers running Klaviyo typically turn off Klaviyo’s native sign-up forms and run all popup capture through Sleeknote instead, with everything flowing into Klaviyo lists and segments via the native integration. You keep your Klaviyo flows, templates, and email logic exactly as they are. Only the popup layer changes. Monis grew their Klaviyo list 4x after switching.

There’s no hard limit. Klaviyo lets you create as many sign-up forms as you need. The practical limit is what visitors will tolerate, since stacking multiple forms in one session feels intrusive and hurts conversion. Most stores run two to four active campaigns at any time, with smart frequency rules to prevent the same visitor from seeing all of them on one visit.

There’s no one-click import, but the process is straightforward. You rebuild each campaign in Sleeknote’s drag-and-drop editor (most stores treat this as a chance to redesign), connect the Klaviyo integration with your existing list and property mapping, then pause the Klaviyo native form. Your existing flows, segments, and subscriber base stay exactly where they are. The transition usually takes a single afternoon.