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Resume vs CV: What Is the Difference and Which Should You Use?

Resume vs CV what is the difference and which should you use — CV Chackr
Akash Jha — Founder, CV Chackr
  • Author

    Akash Jha
  • Published

    January 19, 2026
  • Read time

    4 min

People use "resume" and "CV" interchangeably — but they're not the same thing, at least not globally. Submitting the wrong document type in the wrong context can create a poor first impression. Here's a clear breakdown of what each is, when to use which, and what matters in 2026.

The short answer

  • Resume: Short (1–2 pages), tailored to a specific job, used in the US, Canada, India, and most of the corporate world
  • CV (Curriculum Vitae): Comprehensive document covering your entire academic and professional history, no page limit, used in the UK, Europe, academic roles, and research positions

Resume in detail

A resume is a curated, job-specific document. It highlights the most relevant experience, skills, and achievements for a particular role. Resumes are typically 1–2 pages and are designed to be quickly scanned by ATS and recruiters. You should have a base resume that you tailor for each application. Everything in our ATS formatting guide, checklist, and keyword guide applies to resumes.

CV in detail

A CV is a comprehensive, chronological record of your entire academic and professional history — publications, conferences, awards, research, teaching experience, and more. CVs are common in the UK, Europe, the Middle East, and Australia for academic and research roles. They're also used in India — but confusingly, many Indian employers use "CV" when they actually mean "resume". If an Indian company asks for a "CV" for a corporate job, they almost certainly want a 1–2 page resume, not a 10-page academic CV.

Which should you use?

  • Applying for a corporate job in India, US, or Canada → Resume (1–2 pages)
  • Applying for an academic, research, or faculty position → CV (comprehensive)
  • Applying to companies in the UK or Europe → CV is common, but usually means a 2-page document similar to a resume
  • Applying for jobs in the Middle East or Australia → Resume or CV both work — follow the job posting's instructions

In practice for most people reading this

If you're a job seeker in India targeting corporate roles — in tech, marketing, finance, operations, or any other sector — you want a resume. Keep it 1–2 pages, tailor it to each role, and optimize it for ATS. Use CV Chackr to check your ATS score and keyword match. For international applications, see How to Write a Resume for International Job Applications.