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Listicle 5 min read May 23, 2026

5 Resume Formatting Mistakes Killing Your Interview Chances

Are you making these basic formatting errors? Learn why columns, tables, and custom fonts are causing the Applicant Tracking System to reject your resume.

Khishamuddin Syed

Khishamuddin Syed

Frontend Design Engineer

5 Resume Formatting Mistakes Killing Your Interview Chances

You have polished your bullet points. You have optimized your keywords. But when you upload your PDF to the company portal, you get an automated rejection the very next morning.

Why? Because your formatting corrupted the parser.

Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) are ruthless when it comes to visual complexity. They want plain text, structured linearly. Here are the 5 formatting mistakes you must fix right now.

1. Using Two-Column Layouts

Quick Answer:

ATS parsers read from left to right. If you have a two-column layout, the machine will mix the text from the left column into the right column, creating unreadable gibberish.

Those beautiful, modern two-column templates look great to a human, but they destroy your data extraction. Always stick to a single-column layout unless you are using a specialized compiler like ResuPress that mathematically isolates the text blocks.

2. Embedding Information in Tables

Tables are excellent for organizing data in Microsoft Word, but they are a nightmare for parsing algorithms. Many legacy ATS systems strip tables entirely, meaning anything you put inside them (like your entire list of skills) will simply vanish from your digital profile.

3. Placing Contact Info in the Header/Footer

Many candidates try to save space by placing their name, email, and phone number in the document Header or Footer.

Do not do this. Many older ATS algorithms ignore Headers and Footers entirely, assuming they only contain page numbers. If the system drops your Header, the recruiter will have no idea who you are or how to contact you.

4. Using "Creative" Section Titles

Quick Answer:

Stick to standard titles like "Experience," "Education," and "Skills." If you use "My Journey," the ATS will not categorize your job history correctly.

The parser looks for specific trigger words to categorize your text. If it doesn't see "Work Experience," it doesn't know where to put your job history. Keep your section titles painfully boring and standard.

5. Exporting as an Image-Based PDF

If you built your resume in Photoshop or Canva, there is a high chance it exported as a flattened image rather than a layered text document. If you cannot highlight the text in your PDF with your mouse, the ATS cannot read it.

Always use a text-first builder. If you are tired of wondering whether your PDF is readable, try ResuPress for free. We guarantee perfect text-layer extraction every single time.


💡 Khishamuddin's Takeaway

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication in resume design. Stick to single-column layouts and standard fonts. If you want a deep dive into how parsers actually read this data, check out my Ultimate ATS Guide for 2026 or visit my frontend engineering blog for more technical deep dives.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: Do ATS systems penalize color?
A: No. The ATS strips all color and formatting away before reading the text. However, highly contrasting colors are better for human readability once the recruiter actually sees the document.

Q: Can I use a serif font like Times New Roman?
A: Yes. Times New Roman, Arial, Calibri, and Helvetica are universally safe fonts. Avoid downloading custom fonts from the internet.

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