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Healthcare Resume Format Guide for Australian Job Seekers

Written by E4 People | 6/20/25 4:52 AM

A well-formatted Australian healthcare resume is a clean, two-page document that opens with your AHPRA registration details (where applicable), uses clear section headings (Professional Summary, Clinical Skills, Mandatory Checks, Work Experience, Education), quantifies achievements with bullet points, mirrors keywords from the job ad to pass Applicant Tracking Systems, and lists all current compliance documents - National Police Check, Working With Children Check, NDIS Worker Screening, immunisation, and CPR - at a glance. The guide below shows exactly how to structure each section, with healthcare-specific examples.

E4 People has reviewed thousands of healthcare resumes - for nurses, AINs, midwives, and allied health professionals - across NSW, QLD, VIC, TAS, ACT, and SA. The format below is the one our consultants consistently see convert into interviews. Submit your CV when you're ready and one of our specialist consultants will be in touch.

Quick guide: 8 rules for an Australian healthcare resume

  1. Lead with AHPRA registration number, expiry, and division (RN, EN, midwife) - front and centre, near your contact details.
  2. List all mandatory checks (Police, WWCC, NDIS Worker Screening, CPR, immunisation) in a single scannable block - recruiters look for this before reading your experience.
  3. Keep formatting clean: one column, readable font (Arial/Calibri 11 pt), 1.5–2 cm margins, save as PDF.
  4. Mirror keywords from the job ad word-for-word (e.g., 'palliative care,' 'dementia behaviour management,' 'medication administration') to pass ATS filters.
  5. Quantify clinical achievements (bed numbers, patient acuity, ratios) - not just duties.
  6. Cap the resume at two pages. Focus on the last 5–10 years of relevant clinical experience.
  7. Include a 2–3 sentence Professional Summary tailored to the role (aged care vs. acute vs. community).
  8. List CPD hours and recent training - Australian nursing employers expect to see this annually.

The state of resume screening in 2026

Two numbers shape how your resume needs to be formatted:

  • Recruiters spend an average of 7.4 seconds on an initial resume scan (Ladders 2018 eye-tracking study, updated from 6 seconds in 2012). Your AHPRA number, current role, and compliance status need to be visible in those 7 seconds.
  • Most major healthcare employers in Australia - including state health districts, large private hospital groups, and aged care providers - use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) that scan for specific keywords before a human ever sees the resume.
  • Resumes with clear sections, simple layouts, and ample white space outperform those with multiple columns, graphics, and dense text - both with humans and with ATS software.

1. How should an Australian healthcare resume be structured?

Australian healthcare hiring managers expect a specific section order. Follow this structure and you'll match what they're already scanning for.

Section

What goes in it

1. Contact details

Full name, phone, email, suburb (no full address), LinkedIn URL

2. AHPRA registration

Registration number, division (RN/EN/Midwife), expiry date - only if applicable to your profession

3. Professional Summary

2–3 sentences tailored to THIS role: who you are, years of experience, clinical strengths, what you're looking for

4. Mandatory Checks & Compliance

Police Check, WWCC, NDIS Worker Screening, Immunisation, CPR + First Aid - with expiry dates

5. Clinical Skills

Bullet list of specialty areas, equipment, procedures, software (Bestmed, Manad, iCare, eMR, Aimsoft)

6. Work Experience

Most recent first, with facility name, ratio/bed numbers, key clinical exposure, and quantified achievements

7. Education & Qualifications

Most recent first, with institution and completion year

8. CPD & Additional Training

Recent CPD hours and any specialty-relevant certificates (dementia, palliative, wound care, manual handling)

9. Referees

Two work referees with role and contact - or 'available on request'

 

If you're early in your career

Move Education above Work Experience. New graduate nurses should also include clinical placement details - facility, ward, supervisor's role, key competencies signed off - under Education.

 

2. How should you list AHPRA registration on your resume?

Your AHPRA registration is the single most important piece of information on a healthcare resume. Hiring managers (and ATS systems) check for it before anything else. Put it in your contact block at the top — don't bury it on page two.

Include all three of these elements:

  • Registration number (e.g., NMW0001234567)
  • Division and category (Registered Nurse / Enrolled Nurse / Registered Midwife)
  • Current expiry date (AHPRA renewal is annual, due 31 May for nurses and midwives)

Example

Sarah Chen, RN | sarah.chen@email.com | 0412 345 678 | Brunswick VIC | LinkedIn: /in/sarahchen-rn | AHPRA: NMW0001234567 (RN, expires 31 May 2027)

 

3. What mandatory checks should you list on a healthcare resume?

Australian healthcare employers cannot place you on shift without certain compliance documents. Listing them up front - with current expiry dates - saves your consultant or hiring manager a follow-up email and signals you're ready to start. Include only those that apply to your role and state.

Check

Who needs it

Valid for

National Police Check (NPC)

All healthcare workers

Typically 12 months, or as per employer policy

Working With Children Check (WWCC)

Anyone working with under-18s; required in most states

5 years (varies by state)

NDIS Worker Screening Check

Anyone working in NDIS-funded disability roles

5 years

Statutory Declaration / Immunisation Evidence

All clinical staff (TB, Hep B, MMR, varicella, dTpa, influenza, COVID-19)

Per facility / state health policy

CPR Certification (HLTAID009)

All clinical staff

12 months

First Aid Certification (HLTAID011)

Most clinical roles

3 years

Manual Handling Training

All hands-on clinical roles

Annual

Authority to immunise (state-specific)

Nurse immunisers

Annual proficiency review

Format this as a tight bullet list under a heading like 'Mandatory Checks & Compliance' - not a paragraph. Recruiters scan it; they don't read it.

Format this as a tight bullet list under a heading like 'Mandatory Checks & Compliance' — not a paragraph. Recruiters scan it; they don't read it.

4. How do you write a Professional Summary that converts?

Your Professional Summary is your 3-second elevator pitch. It sits below your contact block and tells the recruiter four things: your role, your years of experience, your clinical strength, and what you're looking for. Tailor it to the specific job ad.

Stronger example - aged care RN

Registered Nurse with 7 years' aged care experience across high-care and dementia-specific units (84-bed RACF, ratios 1:24). Skilled in medication management, behaviour support planning, end-of-life care, and family communication. Looking for a permanent RN role in a values-driven aged care provider in Melbourne's north.

Stronger example - agency AIN

Reliable AIN with 3 years' experience across residential aged care and community settings, including dementia-specific and palliative wings. Cert III in Individual Support, current police check and immunisation. Available for short-notice shifts across Sydney's inner west.

5. How do you turn duties into achievements on a healthcare resume?

This is where most resumes fail. Listing duties ("Responsible for medication administration") tells the reader what your role title already implies. Listing achievements (with numbers) tells them what kind of clinician you actually are.

Use this formula: [What you did] + [scale or specifics] + [outcome or measurable result].

 

Weak

Stronger

Responsible for medication administration

Administered medications safely to 24 residents across high-care ward with zero medication errors over 18 months

Liaised with families

Led weekly family case-conferences for 12 dementia residents; family satisfaction scores improved from 78% to 94% over 12 months

Supported ADL care

Provided personal care, mobility transfers, and continence management for 18 residents per shift in 84-bed RACF

Helped with documentation

Maintained AN-ACC documentation for 24 residents, supporting facility's transition to the new funding model with no compliance findings

Worked in busy hospital ward

Worked 4-bed acuity bay on 32-bed cardiothoracic ward; managed post-op CABG patients including chest drains, telemetry, and PCA pumps

 

6. How do you tailor a healthcare resume to pass ATS?

Australian healthcare employers - particularly the larger state health services, hospital groups, and aged care providers - use Applicant Tracking Systems to filter resumes before a human sees them. ATS software ranks resumes based on keyword match against the job ad.

Five rules to pass ATS:

  1. Mirror exact phrases from the job ad - if they say 'dementia behaviour management,' use 'dementia behaviour management,' not 'BPSD'.
  2. Use both the acronym and the full term once each (e.g., 'AN-ACC (Australian National Aged Care Classification)') so either search hits.
  3. Use standard section headings ('Work Experience' not 'Where I've Been'). ATS doesn't recognise creative headings.
  4. Avoid tables, text boxes, headers/footers, and multi-column layouts for the main content - many ATS parsers can't read them.
  5. Save and upload as a PDF unless the application portal specifies .docx. PDFs preserve formatting; modern ATS read them fine.

7. How long should a healthcare resume be?

Two pages is the standard for Australian healthcare resumes. New graduates can fit on one page; clinicians with 15+ years of experience or specialty leadership roles can extend to three. Anything longer signals you haven't edited.

What to cut:

  • Roles older than 10 years (unless directly relevant - e.g., a specialty exposure you're applying back into)
  • Repetitive duty lists between similar roles - pick the strongest examples and consolidate
  • Hobbies and interests, unless they directly relate to the role (e.g., volunteer first-aid coordinator)
  • Photo, date of birth, marital status - not required in Australia and can introduce bias risk for the employer
  • References listed in full - 'Available on request' is standard

 

8. What clinical skills and software should you list?

A short, scannable Clinical Skills section sits between your Compliance block and your Work Experience. List 6–12 items relevant to the role you're applying for. Mix specialty areas, procedures, and software.

Aged care example

Dementia and BPSD management · Palliative and end-of-life care · Medication administration (S4 and S8) · Wound care and complex dressings · AN-ACC documentation · Manad Plus · iCare · Falls prevention · Behaviour support planning · Family case conferencing

Acute care example

Post-op recovery · Telemetry and ECG interpretation · IV cannulation and central line care · PCA and epidural management · eMR / FirstNet / iPM · Trauma assessment · Sepsis bundle · ICU step-down · Patient handover (ISBAR) · Family-centred care

Australian healthcare resume formats compared

Format

Best for

Watch out for

Reverse-chronological

Most healthcare workers with steady employment

Highlights employment gaps

Skills-based / functional

Career changers, return-to-practice nurses

ATS struggles; recruiters often distrust

Hybrid (combo)

Specialty switchers, candidates with diverse exposure

Risk of length creep beyond two pages

One-page

New graduates, AINs in early career

Easy to leave out compliance details - don't

 

What recruiters scan for in the first 7 seconds

Eye-tracking research shows recruiters and hiring managers fixate on six points on the page. Put your strongest information at each:

  1. Top of the page - your name, current role, AHPRA registration
  2. Professional summary - your years of experience and specialty
  3. Current job title and employer
  4. Current job dates
  5. Previous job title and employer
  6. Previous job dates

If those six points tell the right story without the recruiter reading any other line, you've passed the first screen.

Final thoughts: format for the scanner, write for the human

A great healthcare resume does two jobs at once. It passes the ATS keyword filter, and it gives the hiring manager what they need in the first 7 seconds: your registration, your compliance, your specialty, and your most recent role. Everything else is supporting evidence.

E4 People consultants review resumes daily and can give you specific, role-relevant feedback before you submit. Submit your CV for a confidential review, or contact our team to talk about agency, travel nursing, or permanent roles across Australia.

About the author

Created by E4 People's editorial team. With over 14 years placing nurses, AINs, midwives, and allied health professionals into Australian aged care, hospital, and community roles. We have personally reviewed over 20,000+ healthcare resumes.