Career gaps are no longer the red flag they used to be

Pandemic, layoffs, caregiving, health, further study, deliberate career pivots. Career gaps are more common in 2026 than at any point in modern employment history. A LinkedIn survey found that 62% of hiring managers say they have become more understanding of career gaps over the past 3 years. The stigma is fading. How you address the gap still matters, because the people doing the hiring are still human, and humans interpret silence as something to worry about.

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On Your Resume: Frame It, Don't Hide It

Gaps in your employment dates are visible to any attentive reader. Trying to obscure them through creative date formatting (using only years instead of month/year) usually makes the gap more obvious, not less. Instead, own it.

If the gap was productive — freelance work, volunteering, caregiving, studying — add it as an entry: "Career Break — Freelance Consulting / Full-time Caregiver / Personal Development (Jan 2024 – Aug 2025)." One to two bullet points describing what you did is enough. If you took courses, list them. If you freelanced, mention the clients or projects.

If the gap was due to layoff or health reasons, you don't need to explain it on the resume at all. Simply show accurate dates and let the interview be the place for context if asked.

When a Recruiter Asks: The Framework

Interviewers ask about gaps to assess two things: are you being honest, and are your skills current? Address both directly.

The formula: Brief explanation → what you did during the gap → how you're ready now.

"I left my role at [Company] in early 2024 to care for a family member full-time — that period is now concluded. During that time, I kept my skills current by completing [course/certification] and doing some freelance [work]. I'm now fully available and excited to return to [field/function], which is why this role caught my attention."

Specific Scenarios

Layoff: "I was part of a [company-wide/department] reduction in January 2025. I used the time to [course, project, freelance], and I've been in active conversations with several companies. I'm looking for something where [genuine reason this role appeals]."

Health: "I took time away from work for personal health reasons, which are now fully resolved. I've been focused on [something productive] during that time and I'm ready to return to full-time work."

Travel / deliberate break: Be direct and confident — this is increasingly common and accepted. "I took a planned career break to travel and reset after 8 years at the same company. It was intentional, it gave me perspective, and I'm now energised and focused on the next chapter." Don't apologise.

What not to say

  • Don't overshare personal details. Give the minimum that's honest and relevant.
  • Don't apologise or be defensive. You made a decision. Own it.
  • Don't lie. Gaps are easily verified through reference checks and LinkedIn history.
  • Don't let the explanation run over 60 seconds. Address it and pivot to readiness.

AI interview coaching tools like Talenlio let you practice your gap explanation and get feedback on tone, length, and confidence before the real conversation. The most common mistake isn't what people say. It's how long they spend saying it. Practice the 30-second version. Use it.