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Build Free →Choose the right resume format for your situation. Chronological, functional, and combination formats explained—plus what ATS and recruiters prefer, formatting rules, and mistakes that get your resume rejected.
Every resume fits one of three formats: chronological (reverse order by date), functional (skills-focused), or combination (skills + chronology). Your situation determines which one to use.
Reverse-chronological is the default. List your current or most recent job first, then work backward. Recruiters and ATS expect this flow; it makes your career progression obvious.
Use standard section headings: Work Experience, Education, Skills. Under each role, lead with the job title, company, and dates, then 3–5 bullet points with action verbs and outcomes. Keep the most recent role strongest; recruiters often stop after the first or second.
Functional format puts skills and achievements first, with a brief work history. Use it when you have significant employment gaps, are changing industries, or have limited paid experience (e.g. new grads, returners).
Many ATS and recruiters still prefer chronology, so use a functional format only when your timeline would hurt you more than it helps. If you do use it, keep section labels clear (e.g. "Summary of Qualifications," "Relevant Experience") and include a short "Work History" section with titles, companies, and dates so ATS can parse it.
Combination format gives you a strong opening (summary + skills or key achievements) followed by reverse-chronological experience. It works well when your job titles don't match the target role but your skills do, or when you have a long career and want to highlight relevance first.
Keep the top section concise (3–5 bullets or 2–3 skill groups). Then list experience in reverse order. This way you satisfy both "show me the timeline" and "show me the fit" in one document.
ATS software parses your resume for keywords and structure. These format choices often cause rejections or misreads.
Font, margins, spacing, and file type all affect readability and ATS success.
Common format mistakes that hurt ATS and recruiter scan—and how to fix them.
Two-column layout with a sidebar for skills and a timeline graphic.
Single-column layout with standard headings: Work Experience, Education, Skills. No tables or images.
Section heading: "My Journey" and "What I Bring to the Table."
Section headings: "Work Experience," "Education," "Skills," "Summary."
Resume saved as "Resume_Final_v3_updated.docx" with 4 pages.
File: "JaneSmith_ProductManager.pdf" — 1 page for 6 years experience, 2 pages for 12 years.
Which format fits your situation, and what do recruiters prefer?
| Format | Best for | ATS friendly? | Recruiter preference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chronological (reverse) | Steady career path, same industry | Yes | Preferred by most |
| Functional | Gaps, career change, limited experience | Can be parsed if headings are clear | Less preferred; use when needed |
| Combination | Career changers, senior with diverse roles | Yes | Good when chronology + skills both matter |
| Experience level | Recommended format | Page count |
|---|---|---|
| Entry (0–2 yrs) | Chronological | 1 page |
| Mid (3–7 yrs) | Chronological | 1 page |
| Senior (8+ yrs) | Chronological or combination | 1–2 pages |
| Career changer | Combination or functional | 1 page |
* When in doubt, one page for under 10 years; two for senior or technical roles.
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15 ATS-optimized templates. Single-column, standard headings. PDF export in 5 minutes.
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Write Letter →Before you submit, confirm these format basics.
Reverse-chronological with standard section headings (Work Experience, Education, Skills), single-column layout, and no tables or graphics. Save as PDF or DOCX.
Use a functional format when you have large employment gaps, are changing careers, or have limited relevant experience. It emphasizes skills over timeline.
One page for under 10 years of experience; two pages for senior or technical roles. Never three unless you're academic or C-level.
PDF is preferred for consistency across devices. DOCX is also ATS-friendly. Avoid images, columns, or complex formatting that can break parsing.
Use 10–12 pt for body text. Arial, Calibri, or Georgia are safe. Avoid script or decorative fonts. Margins 0.5–1 inch.
Yes. Combination format lets you lead with skills or a summary, then show chronology. It works well for career changers and senior roles with diverse experience.
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