Framer is for designers.
Portfolio starts from your resume.
Framer is a professional design and site tool, and for hand-crafted layouts and animation it is superb. It also asks you to design. Roughly $5 to $15 a month buys you a blank canvas and the skills to fill it. Portfolio takes the opposite path: paste your resume and it drafts a multi-page website in about a minute, then hands you a matched designer resume with live ATS scoring. If you want to design, use Framer. If you want a site drawn from what you have already written, read on.
What Framer is great at.
A fair read on the tool before we compare. Framer is a serious design product, and the things below are real reasons to pick it.
Place, style, and animate every element by hand. Very little is off limits.
Scroll effects, transitions, and interactive components without leaving the canvas.
Paid plans scale with sites and traffic. Reasonable for a pro design tool.
The canvas is blank. What it becomes depends on your layout and taste.
Framer and Portfolio, judged fairly.
Different jobs. Framer wins on design freedom and motion. Portfolio wins when you would rather start from a resume than a blank artboard.
| Framer | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|
| Best at | Full design control and animation, by hand | A website drafted from your resume |
| Starting point | A blank canvas you design | Your pasted resume, turned into pages |
| Time to a draft | As long as designing takes | About a minute to a full first draft |
| Design skill needed | Yes, that is the point | None; pick from 60 finished designs |
| Resume tooling | None, it builds sites | Matched designer resume, 48 layouts, live ATS scoring |
| Cover letter | No | A matched cover letter drafted alongside |
| Custom domain | Yes, on paid plans | Yes, TLS handled automatically |
| API | Limited | REST API |
Want to design and animate every screen? Framer is the tool. Want a resume-driven site and a scored resume without opening a canvas? That is Portfolio.
When to stay with Framer.
Portfolio is not a design canvas and never pretends to be. If you want to control every pixel, Framer is the better tool, and we will say so.
Move to Portfolio if you
- +Have a resume and want a multi-page site drawn from it rather than designed from scratch.
- +Do not want to learn a design tool just to publish work, about, and contact pages.
- +Want a matched designer resume, live ATS scoring, and a cover letter next to the site.
- +Would rather choose from 60 ready designs than build and animate your own layout.
Keep Framer if you
- −Want full control of every element and layout. Framer is the better choice here.
- −Care about custom animation and scroll effects, which are Framer's strength.
- −Enjoy designing and want a canvas, not a draft generated from text.
- −Are building something that is not a resume site, like a product or agency page.
Framer questions, answered.
Straight answers about the difference and when each tool is the right pick.
Is Portfolio a design tool like Framer?
No, and that is the difference. Framer gives you a canvas to design and animate by hand. Portfolio drafts a finished multi-page site from your pasted resume and lets you pick from 60 designs. If designing is the part you want, Framer is the better fit.
Do I need design skills to use Portfolio?
No. You paste a resume and choose a design; the layout, copy, and structure are drafted for you. Framer expects you to bring the design yourself, which is exactly why some people love it.
Can Framer score my resume?
No, because Framer is a site builder, not a resume tool. Portfolio gives you 48 resume layouts and live ATS scoring so an applicant tracking system can read your resume. You can try the free ATS score checker first.
Does Portfolio do animation like Framer?
Not to the same depth. Custom scroll effects and hand-built interactions are Framer's home turf. Portfolio focuses on getting a clean, professional site and a scored resume out of your text quickly, not on bespoke motion design.
How fast can Portfolio build my site?
About a minute from a pasted resume to a full draft. See resume to portfolio for how the resume becomes a complete website with a matched cover letter.
Should I switch from Framer to Portfolio?
Only if you would rather start from your resume than a blank canvas. Framer stays the stronger tool for design and animation. Portfolio is for people who want a site and a scored resume without designing one.
Keep reading.
The product, how a resume becomes a site, and the free tool to check your resume.
Rather not design it?
Start from your resume.
Keep Framer for the design work it does so well. When you want a full multi-page site without opening a canvas, 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.