A little while ago, we started a conversation about evolving the look and feel of Stack Overflow. Your feedback was clear: you wanted less marketing and more product. You were right. We're sorry we missed the mark, and we're here today with a different approach.
We want to share a first look at the design changes we’re considering, but first, we want to be transparent about why we're doing this now.
The "Why": Responding to Feedback and Preparing for the Future
This is more than a simple cosmetic update. It's a response to direct community feedback and a necessary step to modernize our platform.
1. You've been telling us the design needs an update.
We've been tracking your feedback on what you'd most like to improve about Stack Overflow. "Site usability"—which includes visual design—has been steadily climbing that list. It went from being ranked 12th in January 2024 to being ranked as high as 2nd this past July in the Site Satisfaction Survey. We've read every piece of feedback, including comments like:
- “The site looks poorly designed on most modern work displays.” (Site Satisfaction Survey, June 2024)
- “The UI is pretty full of junk, could reduce the visual noise a bit.” (SO Improvement Survey, 2024)
- “The visual can improve, despite being very well organized; longer code examples and bigger code boxes would be welcome.” (Site Satisfaction Survey, Aug 2025)
Your feedback is the primary reason we are working on this project.
2. We need to increase our technical agility.
Parts of our front-end codebase are outdated, which makes it slow and difficult to ship improvements and fix bugs. This initiative includes modernizing our codebase and updating our design system to make it easier for us to respond quickly. For you, this means a more consistent experience across the site and a faster turnaround for future feature development and bug fixes.
3. We need to adapt while reinforcing what makes this community valuable.
The world of technology is changing, but our role as a community of humans helping other humans is more critical than ever. This redesign is an opportunity to lean into that by improving clarity and reducing friction, ensuring the focus remains on high-quality knowledge. It is also an opportunity to meet the needs of both tenured and new users.
What's in Scope?
To achieve these goals, we're planning a widespread update. Here are the key areas we’re focusing on for this initial phase:
- An updated Design System: We're updating our library of reusable UI components (buttons, forms, etc.), introducing a new color palette, a new typography system, and refreshed icons.
- A wider layout: We know many of you use wide monitors. We're increasing the width of the site to make better use of your screen real estate while still maintaining our responsive layout.
- Updated core navigation: We're simplifying the top bar and side navigation to make it easier to find what you're looking for. This also includes an update to our filtering capabilities.
- Refreshed User Profiles: We're rethinking the user profile page to better empower you to showcase your expertise and contributions within the community. We're even exploring things like a free-form text field and the ability to link to external projects.
However, this update will not hit the whole network at once. We will start with Stack Overflow, focusing on the homepage, questions, AI Assist, and profile. As mentioned before, Stack Exchange sites will continue to exist, but under the Stack Overflow name and brand. This change will not be effective for about ~14 months.
A Series of Conversations
This post is the first in a series where we’ll share our progress and ask for your feedback on specific parts of the redesign. As we’re sharing these designs early in our process, you may find that they look rough in places, especially with placeholder icons. We believe getting your feedback now is more important than waiting for a perfectly polished version.
To make sure we get each piece right, we’ve broken the conversation down into following dedicated posts. We invite you to read through them and share your feedback in each post.
- Part 1: Introduction (you are here)
- Part 2: Color and Typography
- Part 3: Navigation and Homepage
- Part 4: Questions
- Part 5: User Profiles
What’s Next?
This is a massive project, and we are committed to working with you. Your feedback on each of these posts will influence the next iteration of these designs. We will read every comment and will post updates to keep you informed of our progress.
Thank you for your time and your continued dedication to this community. We’re looking forward to your thoughts.