background
# LineNer

HubSpot Bundles: How to Stop Adding Line Items by Hand

Last updated: 01 June 2026
Learn how to use LineNer to create HubSpot bundles that auto-populate line items in deals via workflows.

If you manage deals in HubSpot, you've probably done this more than once - opened a deal, manually added the same 5–6 line items you always add, and thought "there has to be a better way."

There is. It's called a HubSpot bundle, and with LineNer, you can set the whole thing up in a workflow so it runs automatically.

HubSpot bundles now exist - but they’re built for manual use

HubSpot has introduced native product bundles, which let you group multiple products into a single reusable configuration directly in the Product Library.

You can:

  • create bundles with predefined items, quantities, and discounts
  • insert them into deals or quotes in one click
  • edit them after adding, just like regular line items

This solves a real problem - reps no longer need to add the same products one by one.

But there’s an important limitation.

Bundles in HubSpot are designed primarily for manual use inside the line item editor.

They depend on reps to:

  • choose the right bundle
  • apply it at the right time
  • keep deal structures consistent

That works for smaller teams. At scale, it breaks.

Where native bundles fall short

Even with bundles, you still run into familiar issues:

  • reps forget to apply a bundle
  • different reps use different bundles for the same deal type
  • bundles are added too late or not at all
  • no control over when bundles should be applied

There’s also no built-in way to:

  • trigger bundles automatically
  • enforce deal structure based on pipeline logic
  • standardize usage across the entire sales process

So while bundles reduce manual effort, they don’t eliminate it.

The real difference

HubSpot bundles help you group products.

LineNer helps you control how deals are built.

That difference matters when:

  • you have multiple reps
  • you care about data consistency
  • your reporting depends on clean line items
  • you want to remove manual steps entirely

What LineNer actually does

LineNer is a HubSpot extension that handles line item automation inside deals.

It lets you:

  • Add line items to a deal via workflow
  • Update or remove existing line items
  • Apply a full bundle of line items in one action

Bundles are the most useful part for teams with repeatable deal structures.

Here's how it works: you define a bundle inside LineNer (a named set of line items with quantities and prices), then connect it to a deal-based workflow in HubSpot.

When the workflow fires, the whole bundle drops onto the deal automatically. The rep doesn't touch anything.

Setting up a HubSpot bundle workflow

The setup is pretty straightforward once you've done it once:

  1. Create the bundle in LineNer - open any deal, go to the LineNer card,
    then Actions → Bundles → New. Add your line items, set quantities and prices, and give it a name your team will actually recognize ("Enterprise Package" beats "Bundle 4").

  2. Build a deal-based workflow in HubSpot — use whatever enrollment trigger fits your process: deal stage change, property update, manual enrollment.
  3. Add the LineNer action — select "Bundle," pick your bundle.

  4. Test it on a test deal — don't skip this. Check that the right items show up with the right quantities and properties.
  5. Document what each bundle is for — sounds obvious, but when your team grows and you have 10 bundles in the UI, people need to know which one to use.

A note on how bundles work under the hood

Bundles in LineNer are static. There's no conditional logic inside them, no dynamic pricing, no branching. A bundle always applies the exact same set of line items every time.

If you need a different configuration, you create a different bundle. This is intentional - it keeps things simple, easy to audit, and easy to update. When pricing changes, you update one bundle and every future deal picks it up automatically.

It's not the right tool for highly custom deals where every line item depends on the client. But for teams with standard packages - SaaS tiers, service retainers, regional pricing - it handles most cases cleanly.

Where bundles make the most sense

SaaS sales - subscription + onboarding + support is a classic bundle setup. Deal hits a stage, workflow fires, line items are in.

Service packages - audit + implementation + retainer. Consistent every time, no room for error.

Regional pricing - one bundle per region, workflow routes based on a deal property like country or territory.

Any team with standard deal structures - if you're selling the same configuration repeatedly, bundles are worth setting up.

Where they don't fit: custom deals that need to be scoped per client. You can still use LineNer for those (add individual items via workflow), but the bundle concept assumes repeatability.

The reporting side effect nobody talks about

Clean line items make your HubSpot reports actually useful. When every deal of the same type has the same structure, you can:

  • See which products appear most in closed deals
  • Break down revenue by deal type or bundle
  • Build forecasts that aren't skewed by missing or wrong line items

This matters a lot for RevOps. Most reporting problems in HubSpot trace back to inconsistent deal data, and inconsistent deal data usually starts with manual line item entry.

Automating bundles doesn't just save reps time - it makes your CRM data cleaner.

Quick things to know before you set this up

  • Bundles live inside LineNer, inside deals. There's no separate external system. To update a bundle, open a deal and go through the LineNer card.
  • Replace vs. append matters. Think about whether your deals already have line items before the workflow runs, and choose accordingly.
  • Use a naming convention from day one. A list of 10 bundles with vague names is harder to manage than it sounds.
  • Test in a sandbox first if your HubSpot plan includes one. The first time a bundle workflow runs on live deals, you want to be sure it's right.

The short version

HubSpot bundles - via LineNer - are a straightforward way to automate deal structure. You define a package of line items once, connect it to a workflow, and it runs automatically whenever a deal hits the right condition.

It's not magic. It's just removing a repetitive manual step that shouldn't require human input every single time.

Posted in:
Hey! I`m Yaryna, a Product Success Manager passionate about HubSpot and helping clients get the most out of our apps. I write about CRM structure, automation, and the small process improvements that remove friction and support long-term growth.
Left with any questions?
image
Built to keep your organization secure
Security SOCSecurity GDPRSecurity PCI-DSSSecurity CCPASecurity HTTPS

Subscribe to our blog

Get the inside scoop on industry news, product updates, and emerging trends, empowering you to make more informed decisions and stay ahead of the curve.
image