HomeCareers › Resume Writing for Freshers
Careers

How to Write a Resume for Freshers in India — Step by Step Guide 2026

📄

Your resume is your first impression on a potential employer — and for freshers, it can make or break your job search. A well-structured, honest, and professional resume gets you called for interviews. A poorly written one gets you rejected in seconds by an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) before a human even reads it.

In this guide, we cover exactly what to include in a fresher resume in India, how to format it, and the most common mistakes to avoid.

📌 Key Rule: A fresher resume should be 1 page maximum. Recruiters spend an average of 7 seconds on a first scan. Keep it clean, concise, and relevant.

Resume Structure for Freshers in India

Section 1: Contact Information (Top of Resume)

Include your full name, phone number, professional email, LinkedIn profile URL, and city/state. Don't include your full home address — just city and state is enough. Use a professional email like firstname.lastname@gmail.com — not nicknames.

Section 2: Career Objective (2–3 Lines)

A short, targeted statement telling the employer what you want and what value you bring. Customize this for each job application. Example:

"A motivated Computer Science graduate from Anna University seeking a software developer role at a tech company where I can apply my Python and web development skills to build impactful applications."

Section 3: Education

List your educational qualifications in reverse chronological order (most recent first):

  • Degree name, specialization, college name, university, year of passing, percentage/CGPA
  • 12th standard marks, school name, board (CBSE/State), year
  • 10th standard marks (optional if high)

If your percentage is above 70%, always include it. If below, you may omit it but don't lie.

Section 4: Skills

Divide into Technical Skills and Soft Skills:

  • Technical: Programming languages, software tools, frameworks you know (e.g., Python, Java, MS Excel, AutoCAD, Tally)
  • Soft Skills: Communication, teamwork, problem-solving, time management (keep to 3–4 maximum)

Important: Only list skills you actually have. You may be tested on them in interviews.

Section 5: Projects (Most Important for Freshers)

This is the most important section for freshers who have no work experience. List 2–3 academic or personal projects:

  • Project title
  • 1–2 lines describing what you built and what technologies you used
  • Outcome (e.g., "Achieved 95% accuracy in image classification using CNN")

Section 6: Internships / Work Experience (If Any)

If you've done an internship, list it here. Include company name, role, duration (month/year), and 2–3 bullet points of what you did. Even a 1-month internship adds significant value.

Section 7: Certifications

List relevant online certifications: Google Analytics, Python (Coursera/NPTEL), Digital Marketing, AWS Cloud Practitioner, etc. Include the platform and year. Online certifications are highly valued by Indian recruiters in 2026.

Section 8: Extra-Curricular Activities / Achievements

Include: college fests organized, positions held (class representative, NSS volunteer, sports captain), competitions won, hackathons participated in. This shows leadership and initiative.

Section 9: Languages Known

List languages you speak/read/write and your proficiency level. For Tamil Nadu candidates: Tamil, English, and optionally Hindi.

Resume Formatting Tips

  • Font: Calibri, Arial, or Times New Roman — size 11 for body, 14 for name
  • Margins: 0.5–1 inch on all sides
  • Length: 1 page for freshers (maximum)
  • File format: PDF (never Word, unless specifically asked)
  • Color: Minimal — black text on white background with subtle accent color for section headers
  • No photos: Unless specifically required by the job posting (some Indian companies ask)

Common Resume Mistakes to Avoid

  • ❌ Spelling and grammar mistakes — proofread 3 times minimum
  • ❌ Generic career objective not tailored to the job
  • ❌ Including irrelevant information (hobbies like "watching TV")
  • ❌ Using an unprofessional email (cooldude99@gmail.com)
  • ❌ Listing skills you don't actually have
  • ❌ Using a photo when not required
  • ❌ Using more than one page as a fresher
  • ❌ Inconsistent formatting (different fonts, sizes, spacing)

Free Resume Builder Tools for Freshers

  • Canva Resume Builder — Beautiful templates, completely free
  • Novoresume.com — Professional templates with ATS optimization
  • Resume.io — Simple and clean templates
  • LinkedIn Resume Builder — Automatically fills from your LinkedIn profile
  • Google Docs Resume Templates — Simple and free

Frequently Asked Questions

Should a fresher write an objective or a summary on their resume?
Freshers should write a Career Objective (2–3 lines) since they have no work experience to summarize. An objective focuses on what you want to achieve and what skills you bring. A professional summary is better suited for experienced candidates with 3+ years of work history.
Should I include a photo on my Indian resume?
It depends on the job. Government jobs and some traditional Indian companies require a photo. For IT, startups, and MNCs following global standards, photos are typically not required and can even introduce unconscious bias. If the job posting doesn't specify, it's safer to omit the photo.
What percentage/CGPA should I include in my resume?
Always include your marks if they are 60% or above (6.0 CGPA or above). If below 60%, you can omit it initially, but be prepared — recruiters often ask about academics in interviews. Never falsify your marks, as they will be verified with original documents during onboarding.
Is a 2-page resume acceptable for freshers?
No. As a fresher with no work experience, a 1-page resume is the standard. A 2-page resume for a fresher signals poor prioritization. Only experienced professionals with 5+ years of work history should have a 2-page resume. Edit ruthlessly and keep only the most relevant information.
Which is better for freshers — resume or LinkedIn profile?
Both are necessary. Your resume is for formal job applications (email attachments, job portals). Your LinkedIn profile is for networking, being discovered by recruiters, and applying on LinkedIn Jobs. Make sure they are consistent — same dates, roles, and information. Update both regularly.