What Is a Profile in Human Design?
Profile is one of the key characteristics of your bodygraph. It consists of two numbers (for example, 3/5 or 4/6) and describes your life role, your way of learning, and how you interact with the world.
The first number is your conscious line (Personality — what you know about yourself). The second is your unconscious line (Design — what others see). Together, they create a unique costume that you "wear" throughout your life.
There are 12 profiles in total, composed from 6 lines. Each line has its own theme, and their combination determines how you experience your life. Calculate your bodygraph to discover your profile.
The 6 Lines: Foundation of the Profile
Line 1 — The Investigator
Needs a deep foundation of knowledge. Line 1 cannot act until it has studied a subject thoroughly. Their security lies in knowledge. When the Investigator does not understand something, they feel anxiety and insecurity.
Line 2 — The Hermit (Natural Talent)
Possesses innate talents that they often do not recognize. Line 2 needs solitude for development, but their talents only emerge when someone "calls" them out. The paradox: they want to be alone but need recognition.
Line 3 — The Experimenter
Learns through trial and error. For Line 3, "failure" is not defeat — it is valuable data. They are a mutative force that discovers what works and what does not through personal experience. Their life is a continuous experiment.
Line 4 — The Networker
Lives through community and connections. For Line 4, "who you know" matters more than "what you know." Opportunities come through personal contacts. They are the foundation of social networks — friendly and influential within their circle.
Line 5 — The Heretic (Practical Solution)
Has a projection field — people project their expectations onto them. Line 5 sees practical solutions to problems and can influence others. But if they fail to meet projections, they receive "punishment." This is the line of leaders and reformers.
Line 6 — The Role Model
Lives life in three phases: until age 30 — like Line 3 (experiments, trial and error); 30-50 — "on the roof" (observation, detachment, wisdom); after 50 — becomes a true Role Model, a living example for others.
All 12 Profiles and Their Characteristics
Each profile is a unique combination of two lines:
- 1/3 — Investigator-Experimenter. The most self-oriented profile. Studies deeply, then tests in practice.
- 1/4 — Investigator-Networker. Builds a knowledge foundation and shares it through their contact network.
- 2/4 — Hermit-Networker. A natural talent that friends and community "pull out" into the world.
- 2/5 — Hermit-Heretic. A talented loner onto whom others project great expectations.
- 3/5 — Experimenter-Heretic. Finds solutions through experience; others see them as a savior.
- 3/6 — Experimenter-Role Model. First half of life is intense experimentation, second half is wisdom and example.
- 4/6 — Networker-Role Model. Influences through connections; after 50 becomes an authority in their circle.
- 4/1 — Networker-Investigator. Fixed profile: firm position, shares deep knowledge through contacts.
- 5/1 — Heretic-Investigator. Practical leader with a deep foundation. Projection field + knowledge authority.
- 5/2 — Heretic-Hermit. People are drawn to their problem-solving ability, though they crave solitude.
- 6/2 — Role Model-Hermit. Wisdom through experience + natural talent. After 50 — a living example of authenticity.
- 6/3 — Role Model-Experimenter. Double experience: three phases of Line 6 + constant experiments of Line 3.
Profiles in Relationships
Profiles play a huge role in compatibility. Some combinations create natural harmony, while others present challenges for growth:
- Lower trigrams (lines 1-3) — more personal, self-oriented. They need space for their own process.
- Upper trigrams (lines 4-6) — more social, other-oriented. They need community and recognition.
When two "lower" profiles meet, each is absorbed in their own process. When an "upper" and "lower" profile meet, there is a dynamic between the need for society and the need for solitude.
Explore how your profile interacts with those of your loved ones in the Composite section. This will give you a deeper understanding of your relationship dynamics.
How to Live According to Your Profile
A profile is not something you "do" — it is something you "are." You cannot change your profile, but you can live in harmony with it:
- Accept both lines — conscious and unconscious. Do not fight what others see in you.
- Allow yourself to learn in your own way: Line 1 — through research, Line 3 — through experience, Line 6 — through phases.
- Understand your social role: are you a hermit or a networker? A leader or a role model?
Explore your profile in greater depth in your personal bodygraph and in the learning section.