How to Write a Nurse Resume (2026 Guide)
Step-by-step guide to writing a nurse resume that lands interviews — structure, keywords, bullets, and the mistakes that get resumes rejected.
Direct answer
Write your nurse resume in five passes: (1) lay out the structure (Header → Summary → Skills → Experience → Education → Certifications), (2) drop in role-specific keywords from the posting (Patient care, Charting, Medication administration, Epic, Cerner), (3) rewrite every bullet to lead with an action verb (Administered, Coordinated, Educated), (4) add a metric to every bullet that has measurable impact, and (5) cut anything that does not directly support the target role.
Nursing postings filter on certifications and EMR experience.
Key takeaways
- Structure beats prose. ATS systems and recruiters both expect: Header → Summary → Skills → Experience → Education → Certifications.
- Keyword density matters more than keyword count. Each role-specific keyword should appear at least twice — once in Skills, once embedded in a bullet.
- Bullet quality follows the formula: action verb + scope + outcome. Example: "Administered managed patient caseloads of 6 per shift".
- For nurses: Patient-care-led — open with a specific care outcome.
Action steps
- Open the job posting and highlight the 8-12 hard skills and tools mentioned. These are your target keywords.
- Audit your current resume against that list — you should hit 70%+ of the highlighted terms.
- For each gap, rewrite an existing bullet to demonstrate the missing keyword OR add a relevant bullet that does.
- Quantify every bullet that has a measurable outcome. If a bullet has no number, ask "could it?" — if yes, find the number; if no, the bullet may be replaceable.
- Run the final draft through scoutapply.com/resume-checker to confirm ATS compatibility before submitting.
Structure: the only resume layout that survives ATS
Nurses resumes have one job: pass the ATS triage and reach a recruiter. The structure that consistently does both is plain text with these section headers, in this order:
Header → Summary → Skills → Experience → Education → Certifications
Avoid: tables, multi-column layouts, text-as-images, fancy fonts. ATS systems regularly fail on these and you never see the rejection.
Header: what every nurse resume needs at the top
Name (12-14pt, bold). Phone. Professional email. City, State (no street address). LinkedIn URL. Portfolio URL when relevant for healthcare.
Skip the photo, the summary tagline, and the "Available immediately" line. They cost space and rarely help.
Summary: the 3-line pitch
Nurses with X years of experience in [target domain]. Specialty: [the differentiated skill — pick one]. Recent outcome: managed patient caseloads of 6 per shift.
If you can't write a summary that names a specific outcome, skip the section entirely. A weak summary subtracts more credibility than its absence.
Skills: the keyword block
List 12-18 role-specific skills. Group by category if helpful: Languages, Frameworks, Tools, Methodologies. Every skill listed must also appear in at least one Experience bullet.
For nurses, that means hard skills (Patient care, Charting, Medication administration) and tools (Epic, Cerner) at minimum.
Experience bullets: the formula that works
Action verb + scope + outcome.
Administered [what you did, with the keyword embedded], leading to [quantified outcome].
Example: "Administered managed patient caseloads of 6 per shift". Mirror this shape across all your bullets.
- managed patient caseloads of 6 per shift
- trained 3 new graduate nurses
Mistakes that get resumes rejected
These are the failure patterns we see most often in nurses resumes that don't get callbacks:
- Generic bullets that describe responsibilities, not outcomes
- Skills listed but not demonstrated in any bullet
- Outdated tool names that don't match current postings
- Overweighting old experience and underweighting recent shipped work
- Listing a certification that has expired without flagging the lapse