Resume Examples
UX design resumes should pair portfolio links with measurable outcomes. Hiring managers want to see your process — research, ideation, testing, iteration — and the business impact of your design decisions.
Every effective UX Designer resume follows these six sections. Keep the order ATS-friendly and lead with impact.
Full name, professional title, city, phone, email, LinkedIn, and portfolio URL where relevant.
2-3 sentences positioning you for the target role with one quantified headline achievement.
A scannable list of exact keywords ATS systems match against — mirror the job description.
Reverse-chronological roles with 3-5 impact-first bullets each, every bullet quantified.
Degrees, relevant certifications, and licenses — list certifications recruiters filter on first.
Optional section to surface side projects, awards, or open-source work that proves initiative.
Use these as templates — swap in your own metrics, tools, and outcomes.
Applicant tracking systems match exact strings. Include the ones relevant to your experience.
Listing generic duties instead of quantified UX Designer achievements — ATS and recruiters both reward numbers.
Omitting exact keywords like User Research, Wireframing, Prototyping, so the resume never clears keyword-matching filters.
Using multi-column layouts, tables, or graphics that ATS parsers garble into unreadable text.
Writing one generic resume for every application instead of tailoring the summary and skills to each UX Designer posting.