A marketplace profile,
or a site under your own name.
Contra gives freelancers a free profile and a place to find clients and get paid without commission. If you want a marketplace that brings the work to you, Contra is built for exactly that. Move to Portfolio when you want a website you own on your own domain, drafted from your resume in about a minute, with a matched designer resume and live ATS scoring for the times you apply to a role directly. Both jobs are laid out fairly below.
What Contra is good at.
Start with what it does well. If your goal is to find clients through a marketplace and get paid without a platform cut, Contra is a strong fit and Portfolio is not trying to replace that.
Your page lives on the Contra platform, built for showing client work and services.
Discovery and job posts bring inbound work, which a standalone site cannot do on its own.
You can send proposals, invoice, and get paid inside the platform without a cut on the work.
Publishing a profile costs nothing, which is a real advantage for a first presence.
Contra and Portfolio, judged fairly.
These answer two different needs. Contra wins on being a free marketplace that finds clients and handles payments. Portfolio wins when you want a site you own, drafted from a resume, with the job-search tooling attached.
| Contra | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|
| Best at | Finding freelance clients through a marketplace | A website you own, drafted from your resume |
| Where it lives | On the Contra platform, under their brand | On your own domain, under your name |
| Inbound work | Marketplace and job posts, the honest advantage | Not a marketplace, no client leads |
| Payments and invoicing | Built in, commission-free | Not a payments tool, it is a site builder |
| Cost to start | Free profile | A separate paid product for a bigger job |
| How you build it | Fill in a profile and upload work by hand | Paste a resume, get a full draft in about a minute |
| Structure | A profile with services and portfolio blocks | Separate pages for work, about, projects, contact |
| Resume and ATS | None, it is a freelance profile | Matched designer resume, 48 layouts, live ATS scoring |
| If the service closes | Your profile goes with it | You keep the site and the domain |
To find clients and get paid through a marketplace, Contra is the right tool. For a website you own with a scored resume next to it, that is what Portfolio is for.
When to stay on a marketplace.
Portfolio is not a marketplace and does not bring you leads or handle invoicing. If inbound freelance work is the whole point, a marketplace is the better call and we will say so.
Move to Portfolio if you
- +Want a website on your own domain, not a profile that lives on someone else's marketplace.
- +Have a resume to draft from and want a full site built in about a minute instead of assembling a profile.
- +Also apply to roles directly and want a matched designer resume, live ATS scoring, and a cover letter.
- +Want to keep everything if the tool ever shuts down, because the site and domain are yours.
Stay on a marketplace if you
- −Depend on inbound leads from the platform. A marketplace finds clients, Portfolio does not.
- −Want invoicing and commission-free payments handled in one place.
- −Prefer a free profile and are not ready to pay for a separate product.
- −Freelance full time and do not need ATS scoring or a cover letter for direct applications.
Contra questions, answered.
Straight answers about the difference and when each one wins.
Can Portfolio find me freelance clients like Contra?
No, and that is the honest limit. Contra is a marketplace with discovery and job posts that bring work to you. Portfolio is a builder that turns your resume into a website you own. If inbound leads are what you need, Contra is the better fit. If you want a real site to point clients and employers to, that is Portfolio.
Does Portfolio handle invoicing and payments?
No. Contra handles proposals, invoicing, and commission-free payments inside the platform, and Portfolio does none of that because it is a site builder. If getting paid in one place matters most, stay with a marketplace. Many freelancers keep a marketplace for payments and use Portfolio as the site they actually own.
Is Portfolio free like a Contra profile?
A Contra profile is free to publish, which is hard to beat for a first presence. Portfolio is a separate paid product for a larger job: a multi-page website drafted from your resume, with a matched designer resume, live ATS scoring, and a cover letter. If cost to publish is your main concern, a free profile wins on that point.
Do I own the site with Portfolio?
Yes. A Portfolio site runs on your own custom domain with TLS handled automatically, so it stays yours. A marketplace profile lives on that platform, so if the service changes or closes, the profile goes with it. Ownership is a common reason to move to a site of your own.
How does Portfolio build a site so fast?
You paste your resume and it drafts the pages, the copy, and a matched designer resume for you. See resume to portfolio for exactly how a resume becomes a complete website in about a minute.
Does Portfolio help when I apply to a job directly?
Yes, and a freelance marketplace usually does not. Portfolio gives you 48 resume layouts, live ATS scoring so an applicant tracking system can read your resume, and a matched cover letter. You can try the free ATS score checker before you build anything.
Keep reading.
The product, how the resume becomes a site, and the free tool to check your resume.
Want a site under
your own name?
Keep a marketplace for the leads and payments it handles. When you want a full website under your own name and domain, paste your resume into Portfolio and get a site, a scored resume, and a matched cover letter in about a minute, with TLS handled for you.