
A strong CV isn’t just what you include—it’s how you present it. In South Africa, hiring managers often skim quickly due to high application volumes, so formatting clarity can make the difference between an interview and the “not shortlisted” email. This guide gives deep, practical CV formatting tips tailored to South African job search realities, from structure and fonts to ATS-friendly layouts and proofing.
Below, you’ll find detailed examples, formatting checklists, and “do this / not that” guidance. You’ll also learn how to align your CV format with recruiter expectations—whether you’re applying in corporate roles, NGOs, education, retail, mining/energy, public sector, or graduate programmes.
Why CV Formatting Matters More Than You Think in South Africa
Many applicants focus on content first: job titles, duties, and education. But in practice, formatting determines whether your content is easy to scan, easy to trust, and easy to extract.
South African hiring processes vary by sector and company size, but common patterns include:
- Skimming behaviour: Recruiters may spend 30–60 seconds initially reviewing a CV.
- Mixed systems: Some companies use ATS tools; others rely on manual review.
- High variability: Different industries (e.g., banking vs. hospitality) expect different CV styles.
Formatting helps you reduce friction. When your CV is structured logically, recruiters can quickly locate what matters: your current role, your most relevant achievements, and your education/skills.
If you want a content-focused companion to this formatting guide, use this next step: How to Write a Strong CV for South African Job Applications.
The “Recruiter Scan” Layout: Build for Speed and Clarity
A high-performing CV layout is designed for scanning. Recruiters look for patterns: where your experience is, what dates you used, how you explain achievements, and whether your contact information is obvious.
Recommended CV order (most South African roles)
Use this order unless the job ad strongly suggests otherwise:
- Header (name + location + phone + email + LinkedIn)
- Professional Summary (2–4 lines)
- Key Skills (6–10 items max)
- Work Experience (reverse chronological)
- Education (reverse chronological)
- Certifications / Training (if relevant)
- Projects / Volunteer Experience (if it supports the role)
- Additional info (only if it adds value: languages, licences, memberships)
This structure helps hiring managers find information quickly and also makes ATS parsing more consistent.
Example of a recruiter-friendly header (formatting)
Use consistent spacing and avoid decorative elements:
- Name: Thandi Mokoena
- Location: Johannesburg, South Africa (e.g., “Sandton” if appropriate)
- Phone: +27 82 123 4567
- Email: thandi.mokoena@email.com
- LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/thandimokoena
Formatting tip: Put your contact details on one line or two lines max. If your email or phone wraps onto a new line randomly, you risk a sloppy first impression.
Fonts and Typography That Increase Readability (and ATS Compatibility)
Your typography should signal professionalism, not creativity. The safest fonts and formatting choices help both humans and automated systems.
Best font choices
Use one modern, widely available font:
- Calibri (often default in Word)
- Arial
- Helvetica (if exporting to PDF)
- Georgia for headings only (optional)
Font sizes that work in South Africa
A balanced CV typically uses:
- Name (header): 16–20 pt (bold)
- Section headings: 11–13 pt (bold)
- Body text: 10–11 pt
- Bullet text: 10–11 pt
- Line spacing: 1.0–1.15
Avoid making your CV look “compressed” with tiny fonts. If a recruiter has to zoom to read, you lose impact.
Bold vs. italics: use them strategically
Bold is your best friend for scan speed. Use bold for:
- Job titles
- Company names (optional)
- Achievement metrics (numbers, percentages)
- Key skills inside bullet points
Avoid overusing italics—they can reduce readability and create inconsistency.
The “one size family” rule
If your headings and body text jump between sizes unexpectedly, your CV looks unstructured. Choose a consistent system:
- Heading styles: same font + same size + same spacing
- Bullet indent: consistent across sections
- Dates format: consistent across all jobs
Margins, Spacing, and Page Length: The South African Reality
Many South African applicants worry about CV length. The best length depends on experience level and the role. But formatting can help you keep your CV concise without losing substance.
Recommended margins
- Top/Bottom margins: 1.0–1.27 cm (0.5–1 inch)
- Left/Right margins: 1.0–1.27 cm
Tighter margins may look “full,” but they often make reading harder and reduce ATS stability when converting.
One-page vs two-page CV guidance
Here’s a practical guideline:
- Entry-level / graduates: typically 1 page (occasionally 2)
- 2–5 years experience: often 1–2 pages
- 5+ years experience: 2 pages is common (sometimes 3 for highly technical roles)
If you’re targeting corporate or formal industries (finance, law, engineering), a clean 2-page CV often works well.
ATS-Friendly Formatting (Without Losing Professional Design)
In South Africa, you’ll encounter both manual reviewers and automated systems. The goal is to create a CV that:
- Reads clearly on screen
- Converts well to text
- Doesn’t break when exported to PDF or loaded into ATS
Formatting rules for ATS compatibility
- Use standard headings: “Work Experience,” “Education,” “Skills,” “Certifications”
- Avoid tables (ATS may not parse them correctly)
- Avoid text boxes, columns, and complex layout
- Avoid headers/footers for critical info
- Use simple bullet points (• or -)
- Keep file name professional (e.g.,
Thandi_Mokoena_CV.pdf)
PDF vs Word: what to use?
- If the posting says “PDF only,” follow it.
- If no format is specified:
- Use PDF for design consistency
- Ensure your PDF is not image-based (i.e., text should be selectable)
If you’re unsure about tailoring and matching job requirements, also read: How to Tailor Your CV for Different Job Roles.
Headings and Section Order: Make Your CV Impossible to Misread
Section headings aren’t just labels—they’re navigation tools. Recruiters should instantly understand your CV layout.
Use consistent heading formatting
For example:
- Professional Summary
- Key Skills
- Work Experience
- Education
- Certifications
- Projects / Volunteer Experience
- Additional Information
Formatting tip: Keep headings left-aligned and ensure the spacing above and below them is consistent.
Avoid these heading mistakes
- “Experience” when you really include volunteering/internships (clarify with “Work Experience” + “Projects/Volunteer”)
- “Employment History” for informal sectors (not wrong, but standard “Work Experience” is clearer)
- Overusing “Other” categories (it looks like filler)
Experience Section Formatting That Wins Interviews
Your work experience section is the most influential part of your CV. Formatting determines whether your experience reads like a narrative or a list.
The ideal experience entry layout
For each job, use a consistent block like this:
- Job Title — Company Name
- Location (optional if already in header)
- Dates (Month Year – Month Year)
- 3–6 bullet points with achievements
Example:
Customer Service Officer — Telco Group
Johannesburg, South Africa | Jan 2022 – Dec 2023
- Reduced average call resolution time from 9 minutes to 6 minutes by improving ticket categorisation and follow-up processes.
- Achieved 96% customer satisfaction by introducing proactive outage notifications.
- Resolved 20–30 escalated cases per week with strict adherence to service-level agreements.
Dates format that looks professional
Use one style across the CV:
- Jan 2022 – Dec 2023
or - 01/2022 – 12/2023
For South African professional CVs, month + year is often the clearest. Avoid mixing numeric and month formats.
Bullet formatting that makes achievements pop
A recruiter should understand your impact in the first line of each bullet.
Use this structure:
- Action verb + what you did + how + result/metric
Examples of bullet “templates” you can adapt:
- “Implemented X, which resulted in Y by Z%.”
- “Led [project/process], improving [metric] from A to B.”
- “Managed [stakeholders], ensuring [outcome] within [timeline].”
Use metrics—but format them cleanly
Metrics should be easy to spot. Use bold for numbers:
- Increased sales by 18% year-on-year.
- Trained 12 new staff members.
- Managed a budget of R250,000.
If you don’t have exact numbers, use credible ranges or qualitative proof:
- “Reduced rework by improving documentation standards.”
- “Improved incident turnaround time during peak periods.”
Skills Section: Format for Scannability and Keyword Matching
A skills section helps recruiters quickly assess fit. It also supports keyword matching, especially for ATS.
How to structure skills
Use two layers:
- Hard skills / tools (ATS-friendly keywords)
- Soft skills only if they support the role (not generic filler)
Examples:
- Tools: Excel (PivotTables, VLOOKUP), Power BI, SAP, QuickBooks
- Skills: Data analysis, stakeholder communication, process improvement, report writing
Best practice: group skills by category
Instead of a single long list, use categories with consistent formatting:
- Technical Skills
- Business Skills
- Industry Knowledge
This makes the section visually structured and easier to skim.
What not to do with skills
- Avoid listing 40 skills with no evidence. It dilutes credibility.
- Avoid claiming proficiency you can’t demonstrate. South African hiring managers often test skills in interviews.
If you want an integrated approach to what skills to list, see: How to Showcase Education and Skills on Your CV Effectively.
Education Section: Formatting That Builds Credibility
Education formatting should answer: where you studied, what you achieved, and how it relates to the role.
Education entry format
Use:
- Qualification — Institution
- Year completed (or expected completion)
- Key modules / distinctions (optional but helpful)
Example:
BCom Finance (Honours) — University of Johannesburg | 2021
- Distinction: Financial Accounting (80%)
- Relevant modules: Corporate Finance, Risk Management
If you’re a graduate, education formatting becomes even more important than your work history.
For limited experience, also use: What to Include in a Graduate CV When You Have Limited Experience.
Certifications and Training: Place Them Where They Help Most
Certifications can boost your credibility quickly—especially in technical, compliance, sales, operations, and administration roles.
Formatting rules for certifications
- Include name + issuing body + year
- Keep the most relevant certifications near the top
- Avoid long lists of irrelevant short courses
Example:
Google Data Analytics Professional Certificate — Google (Coursera) | 2023
Microsoft Excel Advanced Training — Reputable Training Provider | 2022
Formatting tip: If you have multiple certifications, keep them in a consistent bullet format under a single heading (e.g., “Certifications”).
Proofreading and Consistency Checks (The Hidden Formatting Advantage)
Formatting isn’t only about fonts and spacing; it’s also about consistency. Small errors signal carelessness.
Run these checks before submitting
- Consistent punctuation: either use commas consistently or not at all
- Consistent dash style: use one dash style for date ranges (– is standard)
- Consistent capitalisation: Job titles and company names should match
- Consistent spelling: e.g., “programme” vs “program” (pick based on your style)
- No orphan lines: avoid single words hanging alone at the bottom of a section
- Line breaks: don’t allow random line wrapping in addresses or skills
Common South Africa-focused formatting mistakes
- Including home address when applications don’t require it (privacy risk)
- Using a “photo + CV” format without invitation (many organisations prefer not)
- Using coloured fonts for headings (hurts readability)
- Stacking section titles vertically with large spacing (looks outdated)
If you want a broader review of errors beyond formatting, read: Common CV Mistakes That Can Cost You Interviews in South Africa.
Tailoring Your CV Format to the Job Role (Not Just the Content)
Many applicants tailor content but keep the same formatting every time. Instead, adjust your presentation priorities to reflect what the role values.
How to tailor formatting (practical examples)
For a customer-facing role:
- Place customer service skills near the top
- Add 1–2 bullets under experience focused on customer outcomes
- Keep summary aligned with service excellence, communication, conflict resolution
For an administrative or operations role:
- Highlight tools in the skills section (Excel, ERP, scheduling)
- Use bullets that show process improvement and accuracy
- Consider adding “Operational Highlights” with 2–3 bullets under the summary (only if it stays ATS-friendly)
For a data/technical role:
- Emphasise analytical tools in skills
- Use achievement bullets with metrics and specific tools
- Ensure formatting doesn’t hide important details under creative design
Also review: How to Tailor Your CV for Different Job Roles for role-by-role tactics.
CV Formatting for Career Gaps: Clean, Honest, and Professional
If you have career gaps, formatting can help you address them clearly—without apologising in a way that weakens your confidence.
Best formatting options for explaining gaps
You can include a short line in the relevant time period:
- “Career break: upskilling and family responsibilities (2021–2022).”
- “Unemployed due to relocation; active job search and training completed (2023).”
If you’re worried about how to handle it, read: How to Explain Career Gaps on Your CV Honestly and Professionally. Pair formatting clarity with honest context and forward momentum.
Cover Letter Pairing: Format Consistency That Builds Trust
Your CV and cover letter should “look and feel” connected. Recruiters often compare details across documents: job titles, dates, and the tone of your summary.
While this article focuses on formatting for your CV, the same principles apply to your cover letter: clear headings, readable spacing, and alignment with the job post.
Use this guide next: How to Write a Cover Letter That Matches Your Experience and Goals.
Interview Preparation Starts at the CV Stage
A formatted CV helps you prepare for interviews because it becomes your “proof document.” When your bullets include actions and outcomes, you’ll have stories ready for behavioural questions.
If you want to convert your CV achievements into interview-ready answers, read: Interview Preparation Tips for Job Seekers in South Africa.
Full CV Formatting Checklist (Copy/Paste and Use)
Before you submit, verify:
Document design
- Font is readable (Calibri/Arial/Helvetica)
- Font size body is 10–11 pt
- Headings are bold and consistent
- Spacing is not overly tight
- Margins are consistent (approx. 1 cm–1.27 cm)
Structure
- Header includes phone, email, city, and LinkedIn (optional but recommended)
- Summary is 2–4 lines
- Skills section is grouped and not too long
- Work experience is reverse chronological
- Education is reverse chronological
- Certifications appear under a dedicated heading (if relevant)
ATS safety
- No tables
- No text boxes or columns
- Standard headings are used
- Bullets are consistent
- File is PDF with selectable text (if you used PDF)
Accuracy and consistency
- Dates are consistent formatting across all jobs
- Company names and job titles are spelled consistently
- No typos, grammar errors, or random line breaks
- Metrics are accurate and easy to spot
- You used action verbs for bullets
“Do This / Don’t Do This” Formatting Examples
Headers
- ✅ Do: Name bold at top, contact details in clean lines
- ❌ Don’t: Use complex design, icons, multiple font colours, or unreadable scripts
Experience bullets
- ✅ Do: 3–6 bullets per job, each with a strong action and result
- ❌ Don’t: Write full paragraphs with weak “responsible for…” phrasing only
Skills
- ✅ Do: Group skills and include tools relevant to the job ad
- ❌ Don’t: List generic soft skills only (e.g., “hard working, team player”)
Tables
- ✅ Do: Use simple text and bullet lists
- ❌ Don’t: Use tables for education timelines, skills matrices, or training lists (often breaks ATS)
Sector-Specific CV Formatting Guidance for South African Applicants
Different sectors interpret CV formatting differently. Your content matters—but format can either support or conflict with expectations.
Corporate and finance roles
- Prefer formal, clean layouts
- Use conservative fonts and consistent spacing
- Ensure metrics are visible and credible
Education and training
- Highlight relevant teaching modules, training outcomes, and curriculum work
- Use clear sections for qualifications and professional development
- If you’re applying for education roles, ensure dates and teaching experience are easy to find
NGOs and social development
- Use a summary that links your work to measurable outcomes
- Keep bullets impact-focused (beneficiaries reached, programme improvements)
- Certifications in safeguarding, facilitation, or monitoring & evaluation can be placed near the top if relevant
Operations, retail, and service industries
- Skills and tools may matter as much as formal qualifications (e.g., POS systems, inventory)
- Keep experience entries very scannable
- Include bullets that show customer impact, efficiency, and reliability
Trades, technical, and engineering-adjacent roles
- If relevant, include “Technical Skills” with tools and systems used
- Use consistent date formats
- Certificates should be easy to locate
CV Formatting Tips for Different Career Stages
If you’re a graduate (or have limited experience)
Formatting should emphasise education, relevant projects, internships, and transferable skills.
- Use a strong Professional Summary that frames your direction and strengths
- Put skills directly after the summary
- Use “Projects / Experience” to include academic projects and internships clearly
- Keep it to one page if possible
Use this additional guidance: What to Include in a Graduate CV When You Have Limited Experience.
If you’re mid-career
Mid-career CVs succeed when formatting makes progression obvious.
- Keep job entries consistent
- Use bullet points with results and metrics
- Consider a “Selected Achievements” subsection (only if ATS-friendly and not hiding content)
- Keep the most relevant roles closest to the top
If you’re senior-level
Senior CVs must balance density with clarity.
- Use a summary that captures your leadership scope
- Limit bullets to the best evidence (quality over quantity)
- Ensure dates and progression are easy to interpret
- Consider including a “Core Competencies” section, grouped by category
Exporting and Submitting: The Last Formatting Step Many Ignore
Even a perfectly formatted CV can fail if the submission process breaks it.
Before submitting
- Open the CV on a different device (phone + desktop if possible)
- Download-check: ensure PDF text is selectable
- Confirm line spacing hasn’t changed in the final file
- Validate formatting in Google Docs or a different PDF viewer if you can
File naming standards
Use something like:
Thandi_Mokoena_CV.pdfSibusiso_Dlamini_CV_2026.pdf(if you frequently update versions)
Avoid names like CV-final-final2.pdf.
Email formatting
If you’re emailing directly:
- Use a clear subject line: “Application: [Job Title] – [Your Name]”
- Attach the CV and keep the body short
Common Formatting Mistakes (and How to Fix Them Fast)
Here are the issues that most often reduce response rates—and what to change.
Mistake 1: Too many sections with inconsistent headings
Fix: Stick to standard headings. Remove “Miscellaneous” and combine smaller content under relevant headings.
Mistake 2: Overly stylised templates
Fix: Choose a professional template or start from a clean Word/Google Docs layout with simple styling.
Mistake 3: Skills section is too generic
Fix: Replace generic statements with job-relevant keywords (tools, frameworks, methods).
Mistake 4: Dates are unclear or inconsistent
Fix: Use month + year for every role and ensure spacing is uniform.
Mistake 5: CV looks good but isn’t ATS-friendly
Fix: Remove tables and columns, test ATS conversion by exporting to text-friendly formats, and keep headings standard.
For deeper prevention, review: Common CV Mistakes That Can Cost You Interviews in South Africa.
Putting It All Together: A High-Impact CV Formatting Blueprint
If you want a simple blueprint you can follow every time, use this:
- Header (bold name, contact details, location, LinkedIn)
- Professional Summary (2–4 lines with target role + strongest strengths)
- Key Skills (grouped, tool-focused, 6–10 items)
- Work Experience (consistent entries, 3–6 impact bullets each)
- Education (reverse chronological, include distinctions if relevant)
- Certifications / Training (only relevant items)
- Projects / Volunteer (only if they support the role)
- Additional Info (languages, licences, availability if required)
Your success comes from consistency. A CV that is easy to scan and ATS-friendly communicates professionalism before you even speak.
Next Steps: Improve Your CV Ecosystem for Faster Hiring
Formatting improves your chances of being seen, but results come from a full job-search system: CV + cover letter + interview preparation + job search strategy.
Here are three smart next actions:
- Learn how to structure content for higher match quality: How to Write a Strong CV for South African Job Applications
- Align documents and messaging: How to Write a Cover Letter That Matches Your Experience and Goals
- Prepare for behavioural questions using your own CV outcomes: Interview Preparation Tips for Job Seekers in South Africa
If you want additional growth strategies for finding better opportunities efficiently, continue with: Job Search Strategies for South Africans Looking for Better Opportunities.
Final Word: Stand Out by Being Easy to Read—and Easy to Believe
South African applicants stand out when their CVs are both visually professional and substantively credible. Formatting is your first opportunity to show control, clarity, and confidence.
Start with the fundamentals: consistent fonts, ATS-friendly layout, scannable headings, and experience bullets written for impact. Then tailor priorities to the role you’re applying for, and proofread like a professional.
If you apply these formatting principles consistently, you’ll not only improve your submission quality—you’ll also create the material you need for stronger interviews and faster career growth.