Resume vs CV: what is the difference?
By Aaron Cao · Updated
A resume is a short, targeted summary, usually one or two pages, standard for US industry jobs. A CV (curriculum vitae) is a longer, complete record of your career and education, standard in much of Europe and for academic roles. Country and role decide which you send.
What a resume is
A resume is a brief, edited summary of the experience that fits one specific job. It runs one to two pages, leads with recent relevant work, and leaves things out on purpose. The point is selection: you choose what matters for this role and cut the rest.
In the United States and Canada, industry jobs almost always ask for a resume. You are expected to tailor it, so the same person sends different resumes for different roles.
What a CV is
A curriculum vitae is a complete record rather than a summary. It can run many pages and lists the full history: education, every position, plus publications, grants, talks, teaching, and awards where relevant. It grows over a career and is not usually trimmed per application.
CVs are standard for academic, scientific, and medical roles worldwide. A naming trap: in the UK, Ireland, much of Europe, and Australia, people say "CV" for what Americans call a resume, a short one or two page document. Read the context, not just the word.
Which one to send, and how to build it
You are probably unsure which the employer wants, and this section gives a simple rule. Match the document to the region and the role: a US industry job wants a short resume; an academic post wants a full CV; a European industry job using the word "CV" usually wants the short version. When the posting names one, follow it exactly.
The SubcueAI resume builder produces a clean, single-column resume-style document. For a short European "CV" it fits directly; for a full academic CV you would keep adding sections, though a dedicated academic format may suit better. For deciding what each section should contain, the resume answers cover it field by field.