The Core Difference

A resume is a concise, targeted document, typically 1 to 2 pages, summarising your most relevant experience, skills, and achievements for a specific role. A CV (Curriculum Vitae) is the complete, often lengthy version, including full academic and professional history: every publication, research project, presentation, award, certification, and detailed role description.

The choice depends on three things. The region you're applying in. The industry. The type of role.

Related reading: French CV Guide 2026: How to Write a Curriculum Vitae That Gets Interviews in France · German Lebenslauf Guide 2026: How to Write a CV That Gets Interviews in Germany · UAE CV Guide 2026: How to Write a Resume That Gets Interviews in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

When to Use a Resume

Use a resume for almost all industry (non-academic) applications in India, the US, Canada, the UK. Tech, finance, marketing, consulting, operations, sales, HR, and most other corporate roles. One page for under 10 years of experience. Two pages max for senior professionals. Every word earns its place. If it doesn't add value, cut it.

When to Use a CV

Use a CV when applying for academic roles (faculty, research, postdoctoral fellowships), research grants or fellowships, European and Middle Eastern roles where "CV" is used but usually means resume, medical or scientific roles requiring full publication lists, or any application that explicitly says "CV."

The Indian Context

In India, "resume" and "CV" are used interchangeably by most employers. When an Indian company says "send your CV," they mean a resume. Follow standard resume practices (1 to 2 pages, concise, achievement-focused) unless the role is in academia or research. A friend at IIT Delhi sent a 6-page academic-style CV for a product role at a Bengaluru fintech and got rejected without an interview. The recruiter mentioned the length specifically. It read as "didn't bother to tailor."

Formatting Guidelines

For a resume: clean single-column or two-column layout, consistent fonts (10 to 12pt), clear section headers, bullet points for experience, margins of 0.5 to 1 inch. For a CV: similar formatting plus dedicated sections for publications (in academic citation format), conference presentations, grants, professional memberships. CVs run 3 to 10+ pages depending on career stage.

Tailoring for Specific Applications

Both should be tailored. A resume changes for every application (at least the summary and top bullets). A CV changes less, but always label non-relevant sections clearly so the reader can skip to what matters.

Format matters less than content. A clean one-pager with sharp specifics outperforms a six-page CV padded with filler. Whether you're sending a resume or a CV, the question is the same: is every line earning its space? If not, cut.