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Tips: Formatting Resume Headers for ATS-Friendly Parsing

Posted on October 25, 2025
Michael Brown
Career & Resume Expert
Michael Brown
Career & Resume Expert

Tips for Formatting Resume Headers to Ensure ATS-Friendly Parsing

Quick answer: A clean, ATS‑friendly header uses standard fonts, simple layout, and keyword‑rich contact information. In this guide we break down every element, show you step‑by‑step how to format it, and give you checklists, do‑and‑don’t lists, and real‑world examples.


Why the Header Matters for ATS

Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) are the first gatekeepers of most modern hiring pipelines. According to a Jobscan study, 75% of resumes are rejected before a human ever sees them because of formatting errors that confuse the parser. The header is the first block the ATS reads; if it can’t extract your name, phone, or email, the whole document may be discarded.

Definition: ATS‑friendly parsing – the ability of an ATS to correctly read and store the information from a resume without manual correction.

A well‑structured header improves:

  1. Visibility – your name and contact details appear in search results within the ATS.
  2. Keyword matching – job titles and certifications placed in the header can be indexed.
  3. Professional impression – recruiters skim the top of the resume first; a clean header signals attention to detail.

Core Elements of an ATS‑Friendly Header

Element What to Include ATS Tips
Name Full legal name (no nicknames) Use a larger font (14‑16 pt) but keep it plain text.
Phone Mobile number with country code Avoid symbols like “( ) –”. Use +1 555 123 4567.
Email Professional address (e.g., jane.doe@gmail.com) Do not use generic addresses like resume2024@yahoo.com.
Location City, State, Country (optional ZIP) ATS can parse location for geo‑filtering.
LinkedIn URL Custom LinkedIn profile link Ensure the URL is clickable and starts with https://.
Portfolio / Personal Site Optional, if relevant to the role Keep the URL short; use a hyphen‑separated slug.

What NOT to include in the header

  • Images or logos (ATS cannot read them).
  • Tables or text boxes (most ATS flatten them into gibberish).
  • Fancy symbols (★, ✔, etc.) – they are stripped out.

Formatting Best Practices: Do’s and Don’ts

Do’s

  • Use standard fonts like Arial, Calibri, Helvetica, or Times New Roman.
  • Keep the header left‑aligned; centered text can be misread.
  • Separate items with vertical bars or simple line breaks (e.g., John Doe | +1 555 123 4567 | john.doe@email.com).
  • Save as .docx or PDF (ATS‑compatible) – most modern ATS handle both, but .docx is safest.
  • Include keywords such as “Project Manager” or “Certified Scrum Master” if they are part of your professional title.

Don’ts

  • Don’t use tables, text boxes, or columns – they break the linear flow of the parser.
  • Avoid decorative fonts (Comic Sans, cursive) – they may be unreadable.
  • Never embed contact info in a header image – the ATS sees only the image file.
  • Skip excessive punctuation – multiple slashes or pipes can confuse the parser.

Step‑by‑Step Guide to Build an ATS‑Friendly Header

  1. Open a blank document in Microsoft Word or Google Docs.
  2. Set the font to Calibri, 11 pt for body text; reserve 14‑16 pt for your name.
  3. Type your name on the first line, bold it, and center it temporarily (we’ll left‑align later).
  4. Press Enter and add a single line with your phone, email, LinkedIn, and location separated by vertical bars (|). Example:
    John Doe | +1 555 123 4567 | john.doe@email.com | Seattle, WA | https://linkedin.com/in/johndoe
    
  5. Select the three lines and click the Left Align button.
  6. Remove any extra spacing – set line spacing to 1.0 and remove paragraph spacing before/after.
  7. Save the file as John_Doe_Resume.docx.
  8. Run an ATS check using Resumly’s free ATS Resume Checker to confirm the header parses correctly.

Example of a Perfect Header

John Doe
+1 555 123 4567 | john.doe@email.com | Seattle, WA | https://linkedin.com/in/johndoe

Notice the clean line break, no tables, and plain text only.

Checklist: Is Your Header ATS‑Friendly?

  • Name is plain text, not an image.
  • Phone number uses international format.
  • Email is professional and typo‑free.
  • No tables, columns, or text boxes.
  • Font is standard (Arial, Calibri, Helvetica, Times New Roman).
  • Header width does not exceed 80 characters per line.
  • Saved as .docx or PDF.
  • Passed Resumly’s ATS Resume Checker.

Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them

Mistake Why It Fails Fix
Header in a table ATS reads the table as a single cell, losing individual fields. Replace the table with plain text separated by `
Using a photo for contact info Images are ignored; contact details disappear. Type the information directly into the document.
Fancy bullet points Non‑ASCII characters may be stripped, causing garbled output. Use simple hyphens or vertical bars.
Centered alignment Some ATS trim leading spaces, dropping the name. Left‑align all lines.
Multiple fonts Increases parsing errors. Stick to one font family throughout the header.

Leverage Resumly Tools to Perfect Your Header

Resumly offers several free utilities that can instantly validate and improve your header:

Pro tip: After you finish your header, run the ATS checker, then click the “Auto‑Apply” feature to instantly submit your optimized resume to matching jobs.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. Do I need to include my full address?

Most ATS only need city and state for geo‑filtering. Full street addresses are optional and can be omitted for privacy.

2. Can I add a professional title (e.g., “Senior Data Analyst”) in the header?

Yes, and it’s recommended. Place it right under your name to boost keyword relevance.

3. Is a LinkedIn URL required?

Not required, but highly recommended. Recruiters often click the link, and many ATS index LinkedIn profiles for additional data.

4. What file format should I use?

Both .docx and PDF are widely accepted. If you’re unsure, upload a .docx to the ATS checker first; it will reveal any hidden formatting.

5. How often should I update my header?

Whenever you change contact information, relocate, or earn a new certification. Regular updates keep your resume fresh for keyword matching.

6. Will a header with a personal website hurt my chances?

Only if the URL is long or contains special characters. Use a clean, hyphen‑separated domain (e.g., johndoe.dev).

7. Can I use a different header for each job application?

Yes. Tailor the title line to match the target role (e.g., “Digital Marketing Specialist”). Resumly’s Job‑Match tool can suggest the best keywords per posting.

8. How do I know if my header is truly ATS‑friendly?

Run it through the ATS Resume Checker. If the tool extracts your name, phone, email, and location correctly, you’re good to go.


Mini‑Conclusion: The Power of a Clean Header

Tips for Formatting Resume Headers to Ensure ATS‑Friendly Parsing boils down to three pillars: simplicity, consistency, and keyword relevance. By following the step‑by‑step guide, using the checklist, and leveraging Resumly’s free tools, you guarantee that the ATS sees exactly what you want it to see – your name, contact info, and the right keywords.

Ready to put your new header to work? Try Resumly’s AI Resume Builder today and let the platform handle the rest of the formatting while you focus on landing interviews.


For more career‑building resources, explore the Resumly Career Guide and the full blog.

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