What an ATS-friendly resume format is
An ATS-friendly format is a layout choice, separate from your resume's wording. It means structuring your resume so that automated systems extract your information accurately — while still looking clean and professional to a human reader. The two goals aren't in tension; a well-formatted ATS-safe resume is also easier for a recruiter to skim.
Recommended simple structure
- Single column, top-to-bottom reading order.
- Contact details in the main body, not in a header or footer.
- Consistent spacing and font sizing across sections.
- No embedded tables, text boxes, or graphics carrying important text.
Section order
A predictable order helps both ATS extraction and human skimming: contact info, summary (optional), work experience, education, skills, and certifications (if relevant). Reordering slightly is fine — moving skills above experience for a career-changer, for example — but keep each section clearly separated and labeled.
Clear headings and bullet formatting
Use standard, recognizable headings: "Experience," "Education," "Skills," "Certifications." Within each role, use simple bullet points (a plain dash or round bullet, not custom icons) for each achievement, one idea per bullet.
Fonts and layout considerations
- Use standard fonts — Arial, Calibri, Georgia, Times New Roman — at a readable size (10.5–12pt body text).
- Keep consistent margins and spacing; avoid manually compressing line spacing to fit more content.
- Bold and italics are safe for emphasis; avoid underlines on anything except links, since they can look like broken formatting.
Why single-column layouts are safer
Multi-column layouts look modern, but many ATS platforms read text left-to-right across the full page width rather than down each column independently. This can interleave your skills sidebar with your experience section mid-sentence, scrambling the extracted text even though the resume looks fine visually.
Two-column template with a colored sidebar for skills/contact info and a text box for your summary — visually polished, but risky for parsing accuracy.
Single-column layout with clear section headers, consistent bullet formatting, and no embedded graphics — plain, but reliably parseable across ATS platforms.
When design-heavy resumes can be risky
Design-heavy resumes (infographic-style skill bars, heavy color blocks, icon-based section markers) are riskiest when applying through a company's own online application portal, which is more likely to route through an ATS. They're lower-risk when submitting directly to a person via email or a referral, where a human opens the file directly. If you're unsure which applies, default to the safer single-column format.
How GenioPrep flags formatting risks
GenioPrep's resume score renders your resume's actual PDF pages and runs a layout safety check alongside text analysis — flagging multi-column layouts, embedded graphics, and header/footer content risks as part of your score, with specific fixes tied to what was actually found in your file.
Score my resume freeATS-friendly formatting improves readability and parsing safety, but it does not replace strong experience, relevant evidence, and clear achievements.
See our guide to improving resume bullets for the content side of this, and our Privacy Policy for how your resume file is handled.