Abstract Unipolar p‐ and n‐type organic field‐effect transistors (OFETs) are essential for constructing organic circuits and complementary designs crucial for high‐performance electronics. Traditionally, fabricating these transistors requires separate p‐type and n‐type organic semiconductors (OSCs), which complicates the process due to intricate patterning, protection of the first OSC layer, and considerable material wastage. In this work, an innovative approach is introduced, inspired by silicon transistor fabrication to obtain unipolar OFETs, employing a single ambipolar OSC in conjunction with doped organic semiconductor films (DOSCFs) as electrodes. This results demonstrate that OFETs with DOSCF electrodes suppress ambipolarity dramatically and achieve on/off ratios that are two to three orders of magnitude higher than those with metal electrodes, along with excellent stability. The unipolar characteristics of the devices are attributed to the unique work function properties and the intrinsic charge carrier behavior of the DOSCF electrodes. Significantly, inverter circuits utilizing these unipolar transistors outperformed traditional ambipolar transistors with metal electrodes, achieving a fivefold increase in voltage gain. This novel strategy promises to enhance the practicality and economic viability of organic electronics, paving the way for more sustainable and high‐performance circuit designs.