Nursing CVs are scanned for licences, specialty, and settings first. Lead with your registration and specialisation, then show patient outcomes and the environments you've worked in.
Build my Registered Nurse CV β free βtailored to the job Β· 2 min βLast updated: 18 June 2026
A nursing CV is scanned for eligibility before anything else: is your registration current, and does your specialty match the ward? If a recruiter can't find your licence and specialisation in the first few seconds, strong clinical experience further down may never be read. Lead with credentials and the care settings you've worked in, then let patient outcomes and safety record carry the rest.
Applicant-tracking systems rank on relevance β weave the ones that genuinely apply to you into your experience:
Strong bullets lead with a verb and end with a number. Templates to adapt to your own results:
letsapply.now turns your real experience into bullets like these β quantified and tailored, never fabricated.
The structure a registered nurse CV is scanned for β roughly in this order:
What weakens a registered nurse CV most often:
A summary sits at the very top and frames everything below. Here's an editable template for a registered nurse β adapt every detail to your own experience:
Registered Nurse (RN, current registration) with 5 years in acute and critical care β trusted with high-acuity patient loads and a strong medication-safety record. (Insert your own registration, specialty and years.)
letsapply.now writes yours from your real profile β mirroring the job, never inventing a claim.
List the licence type, issuing body and status/expiry so a recruiter can confirm eligibility quickly. Whether to print the full number depends on local norms and the employer β some prefer "available on request". Always keep it near the top.
Show the current expiry date honestly and note any renewal in progress. Recruiters would rather see "ACLS β renewal booked" than a silent gap; lapsed certifications with no date raise a flag.
Where you can, yes β medication-administration rates, fall reductions, patient loads. They show impact without breaching confidentiality, as long as no individual patient is identifiable.