
Resume Templates
Resume templates that get you hired
Four professionally designed templates, each tuned for a different kind of role. Pick a starting point, customise every detail, and export when you're ready.
A good resume template does three things. It survives the applicant tracking systems that filter your application before a human sees it. It organises your experience so a recruiter can find what they need in thirty seconds. And it looks like it belongs in the industry you're applying to. Every template below does all three. They differ only in how much personality they bring to the page.





Modern resume template
The modern resume template strikes the balance most professionals are looking for. Polished without being stuffy, structured without being rigid. Inter typography reads cleanly on any screen or printout, and the slate blue accent gives section headings just enough visual weight to guide a recruiter's eye through the page in under thirty seconds.
Left-aligned content respects how the eye actually scans a page, and the subtle top divider on each section header creates clear separation without resorting to heavy lines or boxes. It works equally well for someone five years into their career and someone applying for their first senior role.
Best for
- Product managers
- Software engineers at modern companies
- Designers and design-adjacent roles
- Marketing and growth professionals
- Startup and scale-up roles
What's included
- Inter font
- Slate blue accent colour
- Left-aligned name and contact
- Sentence case section titles
- Top divider on section headings

Creative resume template
The creative resume template was built for people whose work is judged in part on visual taste. Teal accents and uppercase section headings with an underline create a confident rhythm down the page. The result reads as a designed object without crossing into novelty territory.
Lato gives it warmth and personality compared to more clinical fonts, and the bottom divider treatment on section headings keeps the layout clean enough to survive an ATS scan while still feeling distinctive. This is the right pick if you want hiring managers to pause for an extra second before scrolling.
Best for
- Designers and art directors
- Marketing leads
- Content strategists and writers
- Brand and creative managers
- Agency roles
What's included
- Lato font
- Teal accent colour
- Left-aligned name and contact
- Bottom divider under contact block
- Uppercase section titles
- Bottom divider on section headings

Minimal resume template
The minimal resume template is for candidates whose content speaks for itself. No accent colours, no dividers, no decorative elements. Just well-spaced typography and a clean hierarchy. Inter handles the entire page, with section headings differentiated by weight and the natural breathing room between sections.
This isn't a template that hides. It's one that gets out of the way. Senior candidates with strong track records often prefer this look because it signals confidence: the work is interesting enough that the resume doesn't need to be. It's also the most flexible base if you plan to customise heavily.
Best for
- Senior engineers and technical leads
- Executives with strong narratives
- Academics and researchers
- Writers and editors
- Anyone who prefers understatement
What's included
- Inter font
- Charcoal section headings
- Left-aligned throughout
- Sentence case section titles
- No dividers anywhere

Professional resume template
The professional resume template is the classic, conservative format that traditional industries still expect. Centered name and contact information, navy section headings in uppercase, and full dividers above and below each section title produce a layout that signals seriousness from the first glance.
Open Sans gives it readability without sacrificing formality. This template is the safest possible choice for industries where deviation from convention can read as unprofessional rather than creative, and that's still most of finance, law, and consulting today.
Best for
- Investment banking and capital markets
- Corporate and commercial law
- Management consulting
- Senior finance and accounting roles
- Traditional corporate environments
What's included
- Open Sans font
- Navy accent colour
- Centered name and contact
- Bottom divider under contact block
- Centered uppercase section titles
- Dividers both above and below section headings
How to choose the right resume template
The right template is mostly a function of the industry you're applying to, not personal taste. Conservative industries reward conservative formatting. Creative industries reward signs of visual judgement. Modern tech and product roles sit somewhere in between.
If you're applying to a traditional industry like banking, law, or consulting, pick Professional. The centered layout and uppercase headings match what hiring managers in those fields have been reading for thirty years. Anything more contemporary risks reading as inexperienced.
If you're applying to design, marketing, or creative roles, pick Creative. The teal accent and uppercase headings show visual confidence without trying to be a portfolio piece. Your portfolio is for that.
If you're in software, product, or any modern tech-adjacent role, pick Modern. It's the current default look in that world: clean, structured, just enough colour to feel intentional.
If you have a strong track record and prefer to let the content carry the page, pick Minimal. Senior candidates often choose this for exactly that reason.
Frequently asked questions
Ready to build your resume?
Pick a template, customise it to your liking, and export when you're ready.