Why Every Portfolio Looks the Same

Why

Every

Portfolio

Looks

the

Same

Design & Dev May 2026 18 min read Long-form essay
Rows of similar houses used as a visual metaphor for repetitive portfolio design.

Dark background. Big name. Short intro. Skills section. Projects in cards. Contact form. Footer.

You have seen this website before.

You have seen it on GitHub Pages, on template websites, on Reddit portfolio reviews, and maybe even in your own browser while building your own. The names change. The colors shift. One developer uses gradients. Another adds glassmorphism. Someone else adds smooth scrolling and polished hover effects.

But after a while, they all start to blur together.

Same hero section.
Same “Hi, I’m X.”
Same grid of projects.
Same tools and technologies list.
Same button that says “Contact Me.”

A Reddit user described the problem perfectly:

“Most web portfolios look at each other for inspiration which creates a feedback loop.”

Reddit discussion [1]

Another comment pointed out something even more uncomfortable: when developers build portfolios with the practical goal of getting seen, getting hired, and avoiding mistakes:

“we always arrive at the same solution.”

Reddit discussion [1]

That is the part worth thinking about.

Maybe most portfolios do not look the same because developers are lazy. Maybe they look the same because everyone is solving the same problem under the same pressure, using the same inspiration, frameworks, templates, and now increasingly, the same AI prompts.

And when everyone follows the safest path, the internet starts to feel less like a place full of people and more like a gallery of polished templates.

This blog is not an attack on clean design. Clean design works. Familiar layouts help users. A portfolio still needs to be readable, fast, accessible, and easy to navigate.

But there is a difference between being clear and being forgettable.

That difference is what this blog is about.

The Numbers Don’t Lie

That feeling is not just in your head.

When portfolio after portfolio starts to blur together, it is tempting to think you are only noticing a small corner of the internet. Maybe developer portfolios are repetitive, but the rest of the web is different. Maybe it only feels that way because we all look at the same inspiration sites, GitHub repos, and design trends.