For final-year students · Updated June 10, 2026

A final-year student portfolio

Final year is when your work is strongest and the job hunt is hardest. A portfolio puts your capstone and best projects in one link — exactly when recruiters are deciding. Free to publish, live in minutes.

By Manan Agrawal, Founder · Updated June 10, 2026

A final-year portfolio showcases your major project and best work right when the job hunt peaks. It gives recruiters one link to see your capstone, projects and skills, and sets you apart in placements. On SitesPlaced it is free for students, AI writes your content, and you publish at yourname.sitesplaced.com in minutes — even if you start late in the year.

Free for students

Generate your student portfolio in 60 seconds

Fill in four fields and watch a live preview build itself. When you like it, publish the real thing free on SitesPlaced — AI writes the first draft from your résumé.

Build my portfolio free →

No plan, no card. Publish at aisha-verma.sitesplaced.com

aisha-verma.sitesplaced.com

Portfolio

Aisha Verma

Software Engineer & Builder

VIT

ReactPythonFigmaSQL

About

Projects

Experience

Contact

Live preview · your real site is fully editable

Final year is your portfolio's moment

By final year you have your best material: a substantial major project, a few solid builds, maybe an internship. You also have the most pressure — placements, applications, the transition to your first job. A portfolio brings all of that together into one link you can put in front of every recruiter, exactly when it counts most.

The centrepiece is your capstone. A well-presented major project — problem, approach, outcome, and a link to a demo or report — is often the single most impressive thing on a final-year student’s profile. A portfolio gives it the space a résumé bullet never could.

How do you showcase your major project?

Give it a hero section

Your capstone deserves prominence: a clear title, a one-line summary, and a strong image or demo right up top.

Tell the story

Problem, your approach, the key decisions, and the outcome. Show how you think, not just what you made.

Link the proof

A live demo, GitHub repo, or project report — give recruiters something to open and verify.

Surround it with your best

Add two to five other strong projects and your skills so the capstone sits in a complete picture.

What should a final-year portfolio include?

  • Your major / capstone project, given pride of place with links
  • Two to five other strong projects with working links
  • A one-line intro with your branch, college and target roles
  • Skills, tools and any internships or experience
  • Achievements: competitions, certifications, publications
  • A clear contact section and your résumé link

Final-year portfolio templates

Live demos you can open and clone — recruiter-ready and free for students.

Showcase your final-year work — free

Pick a template, give your capstone the spotlight, and let AI write the rest. Publish at yourname.sitesplaced.com in minutes — free for students, no card — and strengthen every application in your job hunt.

Build my portfolio free

Frequently asked questions

Why should a final-year student build a portfolio?

Final year is when your work is strongest and the job hunt is most intense. A portfolio showcases your major project and best work in one link, helping you stand out in placements and job applications right when it matters most. On SitesPlaced it is free for students and live in minutes.

How do I showcase my final-year project in a portfolio?

Give your capstone its own prominent section: a one-line summary, the problem and your approach, the outcome, and links to a demo, GitHub or report. Then add your other strong projects, skills and experience around it. The templates here are structured so your major project can lead.

What else should a final-year portfolio include?

Beyond your major project: two to five other projects with links, your skills, internships and experience, achievements, and a clear contact section with your résumé. Lead with the work most relevant to the roles you are applying for.

I'm graduating soon — is it too late to make one?

Not at all. A portfolio takes minutes on SitesPlaced — pick a template, let AI draft your content from your résumé, link your projects, and publish. Even built late in final year, it strengthens every application you send in your job hunt.

Is it free for final-year students?

Yes. Final-year and graduating students build and publish on SitesPlaced for free, premium templates included, with no card required.