Creating a Clean Resume Footer That Includes Secure Links Without ATS Penalties
A resume footer is the tiny strip at the bottom of your document where you can place contact details, portfolio URLs, or a LinkedIn profile. When done right, it adds polish and credibility. When done wrong, it can trigger Applicant Tracking System (ATS) filters and cost you an interview. In this post we will:
- Explain why footers matter for both humans and bots.
- Show a step‑by‑step method to embed secure links.
- Provide a checklist, do‑and‑don’t list, and real‑world examples.
- Answer the most common questions recruiters and job seekers ask.
By the end you’ll have a clean resume footer that includes secure links without ATS penalties.
Why a Footer Deserves Attention
Even though a footer occupies only a few lines, it is the last thing a recruiter sees before the document ends. A strong footer can:
- Reinforce branding – your personal website or portfolio URL stays top‑of‑mind.
- Provide proof of work – a link to a GitHub repo, Behance portfolio, or published article.
- Show professionalism – a well‑formatted footer signals attention to detail.
However, many ATS parsers treat any hyperlink that looks suspicious (e.g., long URLs, tracking parameters, or non‑HTTPS links) as a potential spam signal. According to a 2023 Jobscan study, 27% of resumes with malformed URLs were automatically rejected before a human even saw them. That’s why we need a secure, ATS‑friendly approach.
Core Principles of an ATS‑Friendly Footer
| Principle | What it means | How to implement | 
|---|---|---|
| Simplicity | Keep the footer to 2‑3 lines. | Use plain text for labels and a single hyperlink per line. | 
| HTTPS Only | ATS prefers secure protocols. | Ensure every link starts with https://. | 
| Short URLs | Long query strings look like tracking links. | Use a URL shortener only if it redirects to a clean HTTPS destination (e.g., your own domain). | 
| No Special Characters | Characters like ?,&,=can break parsers. | Strip tracking parameters; use clean URLs like https://yourname.com/portfolio. | 
| Consistent Formatting | ATS reads patterns; consistency helps parsing. | Use the same delimiter (e.g., a vertical bar ` | 
Step‑by‑Step Guide to Building the Footer
Step 1: Gather the Links You Need
- Personal website – the hub of your portfolio.
- LinkedIn profile – most recruiters check this.
- GitHub/Behance – only if relevant to the role.
- Optional: Professional blog – if you write industry‑specific content.
Tip: Test each URL with the free ATS Resume Checker to ensure they are ATS‑safe.
Step 2: Verify HTTPS and Clean the URLs
# Example using curl to check HTTPS status
curl -I https://yourname.com
If the response shows 200 OK and the URL contains no query strings, you’re good to go.
Step 3: Choose a Simple Layout
We recommend the following pattern:
Website: https://yourname.com | LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/yourname | GitHub: https://github.com/yourname
- Label (Website, LinkedIn, GitHub) – capitalized, no punctuation after the colon.
- URL – plain, HTTPS, no trailing slash unless required.
- Separator – a vertical bar with spaces on both sides.
Step 4: Insert the Footer in Your Document
If you use Microsoft Word:
- Go to Insert → Footer → Edit Footer.
- Paste the line from Step 3.
- Highlight each URL, press Ctrl+K, and ensure the link text matches the URL exactly (no display text like “click here”).
- Set the font to 11‑pt Calibri (or the same as body text) and align center or right based on your design.
If you use Google Docs:
- Click Insert → Header & page number → Footer.
- Follow the same copy‑paste and hyperlink steps.
Step 5: Run an ATS Simulation
Upload the finished PDF to the Resume Readability Test and the ATS Resume Checker. Look for warnings about “unrecognized URL format” or “potential spam link”. If any appear, revisit Step 2.
Real‑World Example: Before and After
Before (Problematic Footer)
Portfolio: https://yourname.com/portfolio?utm_source=resume&utm_medium=pdf | LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/yourname?trk=profile-badge | GitHub: https://github.com/yourname?ref=resume
- Contains tracking parameters (utm_source,trk).
- Uses mixed case and extra symbols.
- Likely to be flagged by ATS.
After (Clean Footer)
Website: https://yourname.com | LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/yourname | GitHub: https://github.com/yourname
- All URLs are HTTPS and free of query strings.
- Consistent labeling and separator.
- Passes ATS checks in multiple simulators.
Checklist: Is Your Footer ATS‑Safe?
-  All links start with https://.
-  No query parameters (?,&,=) in URLs.
- No custom display text; the hyperlink text equals the URL.
- Maximum of three links (keep it concise).
- Font size matches body text (11‑12 pt).
- Footer appears on every page of a multi‑page resume (optional but professional).
- Tested with at least two ATS simulators (e.g., Resumly’s ATS Checker and Jobscan).
Do’s and Don’ts
Do
- Use a clean, short URL that points directly to your site.
- Keep the footer center‑aligned for visual balance.
- Include a LinkedIn link – recruiters love it.
Don’t
- Add social media icons that become images; ATS can’t read them.
- Use URL shorteners that hide the destination (unless it redirects to your own domain).
- Insert tracking codes for analytics.
Integrating Resumly Tools for a Polished Footer
Resumly offers several free tools that can help you perfect the rest of your resume while you focus on the footer:
- AI Resume Builder – generate ATS‑optimized sections that complement a clean footer.
- Resume Roast – get AI feedback on whether your footer looks professional.
- Career Personality Test – tailor the tone of your footer to match your personal brand.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Can I include a QR code in the footer?
QR codes are images, and most ATS cannot read them. Use a plain URL instead.
2. Should I list my phone number in the footer?
It’s better to keep contact details in the header. The footer should focus on online links.
3. What if my portfolio is on a sub‑domain (e.g., portfolio.yourname.com)?
Sub‑domains are fine as long as they use HTTPS and have no extra parameters.
4. Is it okay to use a LinkedIn vanity URL with a trailing slash?
Yes, but keep it consistent.
https://linkedin.com/in/yournameandhttps://linkedin.com/in/yourname/are both ATS‑safe.
5. How many links are too many?
Stick to three maximum. More links increase the risk of ATS rejection and clutter the design.
6. Will a resume footer affect my PDF file size?
No, plain text URLs add negligible size. Avoid embedding large images or logos.
7. Does the footer appear on every page automatically?
In Word, set the footer in the master page so it repeats. In Google Docs, the footer repeats by default.
Mini‑Conclusion: The Power of a Clean Footer
A clean resume footer that includes secure links without ATS penalties is a small but high‑impact tweak. It reinforces your brand, provides recruiters with instant access to your work, and stays invisible to ATS filters when built correctly.
Next Steps
- Draft your footer using the template above.
- Run the URLs through Resumly’s ATS Resume Checker.
- Incorporate the footer into your final PDF.
- Upload the PDF to your Job Search dashboard and let Resumly auto‑apply to matching jobs.
Ready to build the rest of your resume? Try the AI Resume Builder today and watch your entire document become ATS‑optimized.
This guide was created by Michael Brown, senior content strategist at Resumly. For more career‑building resources, visit the Resumly Blog.











