Get your lawyer resume past ATS screening. Paste any job description below, get your keyword match score, and generate a tailored CV in 60 seconds.
These keywords appear most frequently in lawyer job descriptions. Missing even a few can drop your ATS score below the screening threshold.
Hard and soft skills that lawyer ATS systems look for
Common mistakes that cause lawyer resumes to fail ATS screening
List every state bar admission with jurisdiction and year: 'Admitted to the Bar: New York (2018), New Jersey (2019)' - ATS systems at large firms filter on specific state admissions
Specify your practice area using the exact terms law firms use: 'mergers & acquisitions', 'commercial litigation', 'employment defense', 'IP prosecution' - not generic 'business law'
Name specific legal research platforms: 'Westlaw', 'LexisNexis', 'Bloomberg Law' - not just 'legal research'
Include billable hour targets or actuals if applying to law firms: 'exceeded 2,100 billable hour target for 3 consecutive years' is a primary law firm ATS signal
List law review, moot court, or clerkship experience - top firms ATS filter on these for associate positions
Quantify deal or case size: 'led discovery in $50M commercial dispute', 'advised on $200M asset acquisition' - scope demonstrates seniority level
Core ATS keywords for lawyer resumes include: your specific bar admission (state and year), practice area terms (litigation, M&A, employment, IP, regulatory), Westlaw and LexisNexis, discovery / eDiscovery, contract drafting, motion practice, client counseling, and the case management software used (Clio, iManage). For BigLaw roles, also include law review, class rank (if top 10%), and clerkship.
Include GPA and class rank if you are within 5 years of graduation AND your rank is in the top third of your class. BigLaw and federal clerkship applications ATS filter on GPA (typically 3.5+) and class rank. After 5β7 years, drop academic credentials and replace with significant matters, deal experience, and client relationships.
ATS systems at law firms typically parse the resume only - cover letters are usually human-read. Your resume should front-load bar admission, practice area, years of experience, and significant matters. Cover letters should address firm culture fit and specific practice group interests. Use ATS CV Checker on your resume to optimize keyword density before both documents go to a recruiter.
In-house roles prioritize: business acumen, cross-functional collaboration, contract negotiation volume, regulatory compliance programs, and cost-efficiency. De-emphasize billable hours and court appearances. Add business-oriented keywords: 'commercial contracts', 'vendor agreements', 'compliance program development', 'risk management', 'M&A due diligence', and 'board advisory'. See also the In-House Legal Counsel guide.
Use a clean single-column reverse-chronological format. Lead with bar admission(s) and years of experience. Structure: Bar Admissions, Practice Areas, Professional Experience (reverse chronological with matter highlights), Education, Publications/Presentations (if applicable). Avoid graphics and tables. ATS parsers at Workday, Taleo, and iCIMS used by major firms struggle with multi-column layouts.
Guides to help you pass ATS screening faster