I created my first form today and liking the tools, however i find the linear scrolling required to access a multi-field form a bit long winded…
Can i modify the layout and locate fields where i need to, to make the form more compact and intuitively laid out, and potentially all fields on a single screen/page?
I looked at a thread from 2020, and it mentioned JotForm using Zapier ?
Has there been any changes since then to Form layouts for Airtbale?
Thanks You, Simon.
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2025 Update:
JotForm and Fillout are typically the way to go for more advanced form layouts.
You don’t necessarily need to use Zapier or Make because these apps offer built-in integration with Airtable.
Fillout is 100% free, and it offers hundreds of features that Airtable’s native forms don’t offer, including the ability to update Airtable records using a form, display Airtable lookup fields & Airtable rollup fields & Airtable attachments & formulas on forms, control access to a form via SSO or email domains, perform math or other live calculations on your forms, accept payments on forms, collect signatures on a form, create multi-page forms with conditional paths, create new linked records on a form, connect a single form to dozens of external apps simultaneously, add CAPTCHAs to your form, and much more.
I show how to use a few of the advanced features of Fillout on these 2 Airtable podcast episodes:
JotForm is typically the way to go for more advanced form layouts. Nothing has really changed in that sense for Airtable’s native forms.
You don’t necessarily need to use Zapier (or Integromat) with JotForm because JotForm offers built-in integration with Airtable. But you could turn to those other tools for more advanced integration.
Thank you, Ill have a look at JotForm.
Another alternative to JotForm and Fillout is Plumsail Forms.
With Plumsail Forms, you can design a compact, structured form using grids, tab containers, accordions, and wizard containers.
This is a simple example of what can be designed with Plumsail Forms: