5 Smart Ways to Diversify Your Portfolio in 2026
Portfolio diversification might sound like a chore, but it’s worth the effort in 2026, given how dominant the artificial intelligence trade was last year. Without some smart diversification, your “just fine” investment portfolio from 2025 may be vulnerable in 2026.
“Investors don’t have to think there’s an AI bubble to be concerned about the concentration risk that AI has wrought,” says Morningstar Indexes strategist Dan Lefkovitz. “Concentration … leaves investors holding a market portfolio less diversified than in the past—by stock, sector, and theme.”
Here are five smart ways to diversify your investment portfolio in 2026.
Rebalancing is a way of restoring the original level of diversification you established. If you haven’t rebalanced in recent years, your portfolio is likely overweight in US stocks relative to bonds.
“A portfolio that started with a 60% weighting in stocks and 40% in bonds 10 years ago would now contain more than 80% in stocks,” calculates Morningstar portfolio strategist Amy Arnott.
Take a look at your current exposure to international stocks, too: Is it lower than your original target? Probably. “Even though stocks from outside the United States pulled ahead in 2025, that followed on the heels of a long run of outperformance for the US,” says Arnott. “As a result, your portfolio might still be light on international exposure.”
Financial professionals often say that investors in accumulation mode with many years until retirement don’t need bonds.
“If you’re over 50, I think you want to be realistic about de-risking a portion of your portfolio,” says Morningstar director of personal finance and retirement planning Christine Benz. “I like the idea of building a bulwark of safer assets, probably high-quality short- and intermediate-term bonds, plus a little bit of cash.”
In her model portfolios for retirement savers, Benz suggests a 5% bond allocation for savers with 35-40 years until retirement. That ramps up to a 20% bond weighting once retirement is 20 years out.
And if an investor of any age is looking to diversify a US stock portfolio, bonds—specifically, high-quality bonds—are an excellent choice, says Benz. Even a small position in bonds provides diversification that can dampen volatility in a portfolio.
Despite their 2025 revival, the performance of international stocks has still lagged that of US stocks over the past decade. That suggests non-US stocks likely have more gas left in the tank even after their runup last year.