How do I know if my resume is ATS friendly
There are a few quick tests you can run without paying for a tool.
There are a few quick tests you can run without paying for a tool.
This is one of the most common problems we see. And it is almost always fixable.
01How the system actually works
ATS systems parse your resume into structured data. Name, contact info, education, work history, skills. Then they score how well that data matches the job description.
The scoring is not just keyword matching anymore. Modern ATS systems use semantic matching. They understand that 'managed' and 'led' are similar.
But they still struggle with non-standard formatting. Columns, tables, graphics, and text boxes can cause parsing failures that zero out your score.
02The format that passes every time
Single column. Standard section headings (Experience, Education, Skills). No tables or text boxes. Standard fonts.
Use reverse chronological order. Most recent job first. Each job has company name, title, dates, and bullet points.
Save as .docx unless the application specifically asks for PDF. Most ATS systems parse Word files more reliably.
03Keywords are about placement, not volume
Putting keywords in your skills section helps. Weaving them into your bullet points helps more.
The ATS checks context. A keyword in a bullet point with a measurable result carries more weight than the same keyword in a list.
Do not keyword stuff. If a word appears 15 times and the job description mentions it twice, the system flags that.
04The file type debate settled
DOCX is the safest choice for most ATS systems. PDF works for most modern ones but can cause issues with older systems.
Never submit .pages, .odt, or image-based PDFs. These are either unreadable or poorly parsed by most ATS systems.
If the application form lets you paste your resume text directly, do it. It bypasses all formatting issues entirely.
05Common ATS myths debunked
Myth: ATS automatically rejects resumes under a certain score. Reality: Most systems rank rather than reject. But low-ranked resumes rarely get seen.
Myth: You need to match every keyword. Reality: You need to match the important ones. Focus on the required qualifications, not the nice-to-haves.
Myth: ATS cannot read PDFs. Reality: Modern ATS systems handle PDFs fine. The issue is with image-based or heavily designed PDFs.
06How to test before you submit
Copy your resume text and paste it into a plain text editor. If the text comes through clean and in order, most ATS systems can read it.
Use free ATS checkers to get a basic compatibility score. They are not perfect but they catch obvious formatting issues.
Tools like Reframed can check how well your resume matches a specific job description, which is what the ATS is actually scoring.
Tools like Reframed can help. It checks how well your resume aligns with a specific job description for free, then shows you exactly where the gaps are.
The bottom line
Small changes compound. You do not need a complete resume overhaul. You need the right version of your resume for each opportunity.
The candidates who get interviews are not always the most qualified. They are the ones whose resumes make their qualifications obvious at a glance.
Start with your next application. Pick one job posting, tailor your resume to match it, and see the difference for yourself.
Check your alignment for free
Upload your resume with a job description and see exactly where you're falling short. No sign-up required to start.
Try Reframed