10 UX/UI Design Portfolio Examples to Inspire You (Updated for 2026)

Explore these unique, standout UX/UI design portfolio examples from UX Academy graduates who landed new jobs in the field of product design. Plus: bonus experienced designer portfolios.

Maria Myre
Maria Myre
|
Feb 10, 2026
|
15
Min Read
Share

Landing a UX, UI, or product design job—at any stage of your career—can be a competitive process. Whether you’re new to the field, transitioning from another role, or an experienced designer looking to take the next step, one thing consistently plays a critical role in the hiring process: a strong, well-crafted UX design portfolio.

A compelling portfolio shows how you think, solve problems, and apply design principles in real-world contexts. It’s often the first thing hiring managers review when evaluating candidates, and it can quickly determine whether someone moves forward in the interview process. For early-career designers, a portfolio demonstrates readiness for the field; for more experienced designers, it highlights depth of experience, strategic ability, and overall impact.

We’re spotlighting a selection of standout UX design portfolios that demonstrate thoughtful process, strong visual execution, and clear product thinking. The examples below include work from recent UX Academy graduates, followed by a curated set of portfolios from experienced designers across different corners of the field. 

With support from mentors and career coaches, designers in the Designlab community continue to create portfolios that stand out to employers—and we hope these examples inspire you as you refine or build your own.

What Is a UX Design Portfolio?

A UX design portfolio is a compilation of work samples that demonstrate your skills and abilities as a UX designer. It should include examples that span the UX design process for relevant projects you've worked on—research insights, concept sketches, wireframes, and prototypes.

One of the most important aspects of a portfolio is to showcase your design thinking process and results. Furthermore, the best UX portfolios demonstrate an applicant’s ability to think critically and solve problems creatively in order to come up with innovative solutions—all valuable components when it comes to hiring managers finding the right candidate. It's also important to note that your UX design portfolio reflects what's unique about you as a designer, so that you can stand out.

UX design portfolios are incredibly important for job-seekers because they provide hiring managers with a glimpse into your skill set and experience. The quality of a portfolio is used to quickly weed out potential candidates whose abilities may not match the specific requirements of the job.

Read more: How to Make a UX Design Portfolio: Tips & Examples to Help You Stand Out

Benefits of Having a UX Design Portfolio

In most cases, having a UX design portfolio is essential to getting a job or freelance assignment in the field. Whereas in many other fields, your resume and cover letter are all you need, in UI, UX, and product design, it's pretty much standard for job openings to require a portfolio. Additionally, it's worth considering that a well-crafted UX design portfolio website can help you:

  • Show Your Specific Industry Experience: Increasingly companies are looking for candidates who have experience or have done work in their specific industry or niche. Your portfolio allows you to show a potential employer the relevant work that you've previously done.
  • Put Your Best Foot Forward: Showcasing your best work helps put your skills in a strong light.
  • Demonstrate Your Process: Your portfolio is a platform to highlight your design process, problem-solving skills, and way of thinking as a UX or product designer.
  • Stand Out in a Competitive Market: A well-organized and visually appealing portfolio sets you apart from other designers applying for the same role.

Keep in mind that a UX design portfolio is not just a collection of work samples; it’s a storytelling tool that showcases a designer’s approach, process, and problem-solving skills. By highlighting their strengths, accomplishments, and design philosophy, UX designers can create a compelling narrative that resonates with potential clients, employers, and peers.

What Should I Include In My UX Portfolio?

When building your UX portfolio, think about the types of projects you've worked on and the skills you have developed that would be valuable to potential employers.

Your portfolio should include a mix of work samples from each part of the UX design process, such as concept sketches, wireframes, prototypes, case studies, usability testing insights, or interactive design concepts. The overall look and feel should reflect your personal style while also highlighting the technical expertise you possess. Additionally, consider including any certifications or achievements that help to bolster your credentials.

Ultimately, your goal is to create a portfolio that demonstrates both your technical proficiency as well as creative problem-solving ability. Your portfolio should be concise yet comprehensive – so don’t overwhelm yourself by trying to cram too much into one.

[MID_ARTICLE_CTA]

What Makes a Good UX UI Design Portfolio?

There are some fundamentals to include in your portfolio, from projects that align with the type of company or role you're applying for (like how Grace Guibert tailored her portfolio website to highlight the UX writing elements of each project she worked on in UX Academy).

As you create your own portfolio, it's worth remembering that hiring managers aren't looking at your UX case studies in a silo to see if they check all the right boxes—if the UX work displayed in the projects is stellar but your portfolio website as a whole contains bad UX, that can be a red flag. Conversely, incorporating user centric design principles and strong visual design in your portfolio website can further demonstrate your strength as a designer.

For more insight and tips on crafting an effective UX design portfolio, watch this video by Kelly Stevens, who shares her top tips for design portfolios:

Read more: 6 UX/UI Design Portfolio Builders You Should Try, From Low Effort to Highly Customizable

10 UI & UX Design Portfolio Examples

Before they can graduate from UX Academy, each student must have their design portfolio approved by a panel of experts. This helps to ensure that each student has the strongest chance of success in the job search process as they move into the Career Services phase.

Each UX designer's portfolio in this roundup is unique and stands out for a different reason. But it's worth noting that each UI / UX portfolio site also embraces visual design and UX best practices to create a powerful, engaging experience for curious viewers and prospective employers alike.

Nicole Locklair, formerly in charge of Talent Partnerships and Career Services at Designlab, selected these ten portfolios to showcase, along with insights into what was particularly great about each one. (Portfolios are listed in no particular order.)

10 Great Portfolio Examples from Designlab Students

Here are some of our top student portfolios, and insights into what we particularly liked about each. (Portfolios are listed in no particular order.)

1. Mia Galloro

Mia’s portfolio is clean, modern, and easy to navigate, with case studies that immediately communicate both the problem space and the design value. Her work spans strong user research and branding + UX/UI, and projects like Mile 20 stand out for their clear concept and emotionally resonant user need—supporting long-distance runners through connection on race day. The mix of digital product work and responsive redesigns shows range, while the presentation stays focused and professional. This is a strong portfolio that demonstrates thoughtful UX process and confident visual execution.

2. Gloria Ha

Screenshot from Gloria Ha's portfolio website

This is another great portfolio website that adds unexpected touches and a bold personal brand into the viewing experience. Elements on the homepage animate if you stumble across them, but aren't moving so quickly or intrusively as to detract from the work. 

Gloria also has a good variety of work: a skincare e-commerce experience, a bank feature, and a travel booking redesign. Showing your versatility in this way can certainly help when looking for your first UX/UI design role.

3. Crystal Faron 

Crystal’s portfolio strikes a great balance between warm, empathy-led storytelling and a thoughtfully structured UX process. Her case studies are clearly organized and easy to follow, with a strong emphasis on research, user insights, and strategic decision-making. The overall site feels polished and intentional, with friendly branding and a clear personal point of view that comes through consistently. This is a portfolio that feels grounded in real user needs while still showcasing confident visual design and a customer-first mindset.

4. Mira Ko

UX Portfolio of Mira Ko

Mira's work across her portfolio uses inviting colors and accessible layouts, showcasing has strong UI can truly enhance the overall design experience. She also has a unique take on highly practical applications of UX, from designing a gamified version of an app to ease the stress of moving, to creating a platform where users can easily find out more information about upcoming candidates in local and wider elections.

5. Matt Fredette

Matt’s portfolio has a calm, polished presence and a clear point of view: he’s deeply invested in understanding people and designing tools that meet them where they are. His case studies highlight human-centered problem framing and thoughtful UX decision-making, with strong attention to accessibility and real-world application. The writing is straightforward and grounded, and the site does a great job of positioning him as both a product thinker and a visual designer. Overall, this is a compelling portfolio that feels empathetic, intentional, and highly relevant to modern product work.

6. Juliann Mapletoft

Juliann’s portfolio is bright, approachable, and grounded in a clear design philosophy: simple, clean, functional interfaces with a “splash of creativity.” Her work is presented in an easy-to-scan format with strong visual mockups that quickly communicate UI quality, and her projects—like Cooklet, New Leaf, and a Spotify feature addition—highlight end-to-end thinking across mobile and responsive web design. The site also has a friendly, inviting tone that makes her feel personable and collaborative. This is a polished portfolio that showcases solid UX fundamentals and a strong eye for clean, modern UI.

7. Naomi Ncube

Naomi Ncube's UX design portfolio

Naomi's portfolio is clean, consistent, and easy to navigate, with projects clearly showcased to provide an understanding of what they're all about before even clicking into the case study. Additionally, Naomi's work showcases some great examples of competitor research, an important aspect of the design process when understanding both your users and other options on the market for a potential product.

8. Jastin Aguinaldo 

Jastin’s portfolio immediately feels welcoming and personable, with a clean layout that makes it easy to explore his work without distraction. His case studies show strong visual polish while keeping the focus on the product thinking behind each project. The branding is cohesive and confident, and his approachable voice gives the work a human touch that makes the portfolio memorable. This is a strong, well-curated presentation that highlights both craft and clarity.

9. Chofi Chang

Chofi Chang's ux design portfolio

Chofi's portfolio is a great study in how to display different types of projects without feeling fragmented. Chofi specializes in creating brand identity, and has project work across both UX and other types of design. The visual presentation showcases the various design projects, but still communicates a sense of cohesion.

10. Estefania Serrano 

Nía’s portfolio is vibrant, visually dynamic, and rooted in strong UX fundamentals—especially information architecture and research-driven problem-solving. Her background in architecture shines through in the structure of her work: the site is organized cleanly, her project summaries are easy to scan, and she highlights a wide range of skills from branding and motion design to usability testing and prototyping. Projects like Fit’d App and Creativitree show thoughtful end-to-end design thinking while maintaining strong visual storytelling throughout. This is an engaging portfolio that balances bold creativity with a clear, strategic design process.

BONUS: Experienced UX & Product Design Portfolios

While strong portfolios are essential at every stage of a design career, the way experienced designers present their work often reflects a different level of depth and complexity. Beyond polished visuals, senior UX, UI, and product designers use their portfolios to communicate strategic thinking, real-world constraints, and the impact of their decisions across teams and products.

The portfolios below highlight experienced designers working in different areas of the field, from product design and UX strategy to visual design and systems thinking. Together, these examples offer a look at how seasoned designers tell richer, more nuanced stories through their portfolios.

1. Karolis Kosas

Karolis’s portfolio showcases a refined mastery of product and UX design, grounded in research, strategic thinking, and polished interaction design. His work demonstrates a strong ability to translate complex systems into intuitive, user-centered experiences across mobile and web platforms. Clear process storytelling highlights his strengths in discovery, prototyping, and iterative testing, while the visual execution remains clean, purposeful, and highly considered. This is a portfolio that balances thoughtful product thinking with sophisticated UI craft, reflecting the depth and confidence of an experienced working designer.

2. Jackson Ringger

Jackson's portfolio is confident and multidimensional, demonstrating both product design rigor and visual creativity. The work is presented with clarity and purpose, showing strong process thinking, problem framing, and thoughtful solutions that balance user needs with visual polish. The site moves seamlessly between digital product work and graphic experimentation, reflecting a designer who can navigate both strategic system thinking and expressive visual craft. With refined layouts and clear storytelling throughout, this is a portfolio that communicates depth of experience and versatility as a practicing designer.

3. Jessica Goldman

Jessica’s portfolio presents the work of a seasoned product designer who blends user-centered research, growth strategy, and iterative testing into thoughtful digital experiences. The case studies are structured to clearly communicate both process and impact, showing how insights and experimentation inform solutions that solve real user and business problems. Her approach emphasizes asking the right questions, aligning user needs with strategic goals, and validating decisions through data and testing—making for work that is both purposeful and measurable. The portfolio balances clarity and sophistication, reflecting the craft of a working designer with a strong foundation in UX fundamentals and product thinking.

4. Ramachandra Swamy

Ramachandra’s portfolio presents the work of a thoughtful product designer with a strong grounding in user research, empathy-led decision-making, and strategic UX problem-solving. The case studies emphasize a research-informed process—from discovery and wireframing through prototyping and iteration—highlighting how insights guide design choices that serve real user needs while supporting business goals. Presented with clear storytelling and purposeful visual craft, this is a portfolio that communicates both depth of experience and intentional product thinking, reflecting an experienced designer who knows how to balance strategic rigor with polished execution.

5. Nicole Roberts

Nicole’s portfolio reflects the work of an experienced product and UX designer who blends user-centered research, data-informed decision-making, and polished interaction design. Her case studies clearly communicate thoughtful problem framing, iterative exploration, and measurable outcomes, showing how design choices are grounded in real user insights and business impact. The site emphasizes clarity of process and storytelling, demonstrating strength in aligning user needs with strategic goals while maintaining visual precision and purposeful execution. This is a portfolio that showcases both deep UX fundamentals and a practiced, collaborative approach to solving complex design challenges.

Are you considering a career change into the fields of UX/UI or product design?

If you’re preparing to land your first UX/UI design or product design role, a strong portfolio is essential. That's why portfolio building is such a big part of UX Academy—our fully online, intensive program created to help designers develop in-demand skills and create job-ready portfolios.

Or are you an experienced designer looking to level up?

Designlab also offers a range of programs and courses for experienced designers, including our AI course for UX and product designers, advanced Figma training, and more. Those interested in leveling up their portfolios might be particularly interested in our advanced UI program.

Launch a career in ux design with our top-rated program

Top Designers Use Data.

Gain confidence using product data to design better, justify design decisions, and win stakeholders. 6-week course for experienced UX designers.

Launch a career in ux design with our top-rated program

Top Designers Use Data.

Gain confidence using product data to design better, justify design decisions, and win stakeholders. 6-week course for experienced UX designers.