Most CVs have a gap somewhere. Layoffs, caregiving, study, illness, a sabbatical you do not regret. The gap itself rarely costs you the job. What costs you the job is leaving it unexplained, so a recruiter fills the silence with the worst story they can imagine.
Decide whether the gap even needs explaining
A two-month gap between jobs is normal and needs no comment. Recruiters expect a few weeks of search time. If you are tempted to justify every short break, stop. You only need to address a gap that is long enough to raise a question, roughly six months or more, or one that interrupts an otherwise tight timeline.
For anything shorter, switch your CV dates from months to years. A role listed as 2022 to 2023 hides a four-month gap that 'March 2022 to November 2022' would expose. This is not deception. It is choosing a resolution that matches what the reader actually needs.
Name the gap in plain language
When a gap is long, give it a line of its own in your experience section, dated like any other entry. Use a neutral, factual label:
- Career break, 2023 to 2024 followed by one line on what you did
- Full-time caregiver, 2022 to 2023
- Professional development and study, 2023
The trick is to treat the period as a thing you did, not a hole where work should have been. One honest line beats a paragraph of apology.
Show what you kept doing
Few people sit completely still during a break. Add the parts that kept you sharp: a freelance project, a course you finished, volunteer work, an open-source contribution. You are not padding. You are showing that your skills did not rust.
A gap with evidence of activity reads as a chapter. A gap with nothing in it reads as a question mark.
If you genuinely did step back fully, that is allowed too. 'Took a planned year out to care for a parent' is a complete and respectable answer.
Match the cover letter to the CV
Your CV states the gap. Your cover letter, if you send one, can add one sentence of context and then pivot fast to why you are a strong fit now. Do not spend a paragraph on it. Recruiters care far more about what you bring today than about a quiet stretch two years ago. If you want help lining up the rest of your CV to point recruiters at your strengths, Postulit turns your LinkedIn profile into a clean, recruiter-ready CV in a few clicks.
Be ready to say it out loud
Whatever your CV says, expect the question in an interview. Rehearse a calm, two-sentence version: what happened, and what you are focused on now. The tone you want is matter-of-fact, not defensive. A candidate who owns their timeline comes across as more credible than one who skipped two years and hopes nobody noticed.
Gaps are part of most careers. Explain the long ones briefly, hide the short ones with year-level dates, and put your energy into the part of the CV that actually wins interviews: your results.