Comparison

Linktree vs Carrd, and when neither is the right pick.

Quick answer: pick Linktree if you want a tap-friendly list of links under one bio, ready in five minutes with a free tier. Pick Carrd if you want one genuinely handsome scrolling page and the lowest price around, from $9 a year. Both are excellent at their one job. Neither is built for a resume-driven career site with several pages, a matched designer resume, and a live ATS score, and that is the gap Portfolio fills. The full head to head is below, Linktree and Carrd included on their merits.

The core difference

A link list, a single page, or a whole career site.

These three tools sit at three different sizes of ambition. Naming that clearly is the fastest way to choose.

"Do I need a list of links, one page, or an actual website about my career?"

That question decides everything, and it is worth answering before you compare features. Linktree exists to put every link you share, socials, shop, latest post, behind one short bio URL. It is fast, it has a free tier, and on a phone it is close to perfect for the job. What it is not is a website. Your page lives on a Linktree URL by default, and the content is a list, not pages a recruiter can read.

Carrd is a step up in craft. For $9 a year on Pro Lite it builds one beautiful, hand-placed scrolling page with forms and a custom domain. If a single tight page is the whole story, Carrd is hard to beat on both looks and price, and you control every block yourself. The limit is in the name of the shape: one page. When your career needs an about page, case studies, writing, and contact as separate destinations, you are fighting the tool.

Portfolio starts from a different input. You paste a resume PDF or a LinkedIn export, and it drafts a multi-page site, a matched designer resume with a live ATS score, and a cover letter, in about a minute. You get 60 designs and a custom domain with TLS handled for you, and no design work is required to reach a finished result. It is the heaviest of the three on purpose, aimed at the job of presenting a career rather than a bio or a splash.

So the honest shape is this. Linktree organizes your links. Carrd perfects one page. Portfolio turns a resume into a site. They overlap only at the edges.

Fair comparison

Linktree, Carrd, and Portfolio.

A table that only pitched Portfolio would be useless for choosing between the two you came to compare. Here is an even look, including the rows where Linktree and Carrd clearly win.

CriterionLinktreeCarrdPortfolio
Primary shapeA link-in-bio listOne scrolling pageA multi-page career site
Lowest priceFree tier, paid plans on topFrom $9 a year, the value pickA separate paid product for a bigger job
Time to something liveMinutes, it is a formAn hour or two of hand layoutA first draft in about a minute
Handles many links in one bioExactly what it is forYou build the list yourselfLinks live inside real pages
One hand-crafted pageList layout onlyBest in this groupMulti-page by design
Separate about, work, contact pagesNo, one listNo, one pageYes, drafted for you
Built from your resumeManual entryBlank canvasPaste a resume, get a draft
Designer resume with live ATS scoreNoNo, it is a site builder48 layouts, scored as you edit
Matched cover letterNoNoDrafted from the same content
Custom domainOn paid plansYes, on Pro plansYes, TLS automatic
Found by search and AI answer enginesThin single pageOne indexable pageServer-rendered pages, llms.txt feed
Best fitA shareable list of linksOne gorgeous page, cheaplyPresenting a career from a resume

Prices are the published figures at the time of writing and can change, so confirm current plans on each vendor's own site. Carrd starts at $9 a year for Pro Lite; Linktree offers a free tier plus paid plans.

When each one wins

When to pick Linktree, Carrd, or Portfolio.

A comparison you can trust has to name the case for the other tools, not just its own. Here it is, plainly.

Linktree wins when the job is one bio link that fans out to everything else you post. A creator sharing a shop, a newsletter, and three socials from a single phone-friendly page is exactly who Linktree was made for, and Portfolio is not trying to replace that. If you want a link hub and nothing heavier, Linktree is the right call.

Carrd wins when you want one striking page and the lowest bill you can find. At $9 a year it is the value champion of one-page builders, and if you enjoy placing each block by hand for a splash, an event, or a tight personal one-pager, Carrd will serve you better than Portfolio will. We would rather point you there than oversell.

Portfolio wins when the thing you are presenting is a career, not a link list or a single page. If you have a resume and want a multi-page site, a scored resume, and a cover letter that all read as one brand, drafted for you in about a minute, that is the trade Portfolio makes. You can see exactly how a resume becomes a site on the resume to portfolio page.

FAQ

Common questions.

What people ask when they weigh Linktree against Carrd, and where Portfolio fits.

Is Linktree or Carrd better for a personal site?

It depends on shape. Linktree is better when you want a single bio link that lists everything you share. Carrd is better when you want one designed page with real layout, and it costs less than almost anything at $9 a year. If you want distinct pages about your work, neither shape fits, which is where Portfolio comes in.

Is Portfolio cheaper than Carrd?

No. Carrd starts at $9 a year and for a single page nothing beats it on price. Portfolio is a separate paid product built for a larger job: a multi-page site drafted from your resume with a designer resume and a live ATS score. If price for one page is the priority, stay on Carrd.

Can Linktree or Carrd build a real multi-page website?

Not in the way a career site needs. Linktree is a link list and Carrd centers on one scrolling page. Portfolio drafts a multi-page site, about, case studies, writing, and contact, from a resume in about a minute, then publishes it to your own domain.

What does the ATS score in Portfolio actually check?

It checks whether an applicant tracking system can read your resume cleanly: parseable structure, no formatting that breaks extraction, and the keywords that match the role. The number updates live as you edit. You can try the free ATS score checker before you build anything.

Do all three let me use my own domain?

Carrd and Portfolio both connect a custom domain, and Portfolio provisions TLS automatically. Linktree supports a custom domain on its paid plans. On that one point the three are broadly comparable, so it should not decide the choice by itself.

Will any of these show up in search and AI answers?

A single Linktree or Carrd page is thin, so it gives search engines little to index. Portfolio ships server-rendered pages plus an llms.txt feed, a machine-readable summary that AI answer engines can read and cite when someone looks you up.

Read this first

Who Portfolio is not for.

If one of these is you, Linktree or Carrd is the better pick, and we will say so.

Choose Linktree or Carrd if

  • You want a bio link that lists everything. Linktree is built for exactly that, and Portfolio would be heavier than the job needs.
  • One page is the whole story. Carrd is the better tool for a single hand-placed page, and at $9 a year it is the value pick, full stop.
  • You want the lowest possible bill. Neither the resume drafting nor the ATS scoring in Portfolio matters if a cheap single page already does the job.
  • You enjoy placing every block by hand. Portfolio drafts the site for you, so if the manual craft is the fun part, Carrd fits your hands better.

Want the deeper version of either side? Read the Linktree alternative and Carrd alternative pages, or see the full Portfolio overview.

Try Portfolio

Outgrown a list or a single page.

Keep Linktree for the bio link and Carrd for the one page they each do so well. When you want a full career site, paste your resume into Portfolio and get a multi-page site, a scored resume, and a matched cover letter in about a minute, with TLS handled for you. Start free.