If you studied or grew up outside the US and you're applying to US roles, you're not just competing on experience — you're competing on context a US recruiter doesn't have. They skim in six seconds, they've never heard of your previous employer, and they read CVs in a very specific format. Small fixes here move you from "instant skip" to "let's talk."
1. Translate your context, not just your words
A US recruiter won't recognize "Grab," "Naver," "Rakuten," or your university's national ranking. Give them an anchor:
Before: Software Engineer, Grab
After: Software Engineer, Grab (Southeast Asia's largest ride-hailing platform, ~$16B valuation)
One clause turns an unknown line into an impressive one. Do the same for top universities, well-known local companies, and national awards.
2. Use a US-style resume, not a CV
- One page for students and new grads (a multi-page CV reads as "didn't edit").
- No photo, no date of birth, no marital status, no nationality. These are standard abroad and a red flag in the US.
- Skills and impact up top, education near the top only if you're a recent grad.
- Reverse-chronological, single column, parseable by ATS.
3. Quantify — it crosses every border
Numbers don't need translation. "Improved the system" is vague in any country; "cut checkout latency 35%" lands instantly with a US hiring manager. Put a real metric in as many bullets as you honestly can.
4. Watch the AI-tell — it's worse for non-native writers
Here's the trap: many international applicants use ChatGPT to "fix their English." It does — and in the process makes every resume sound identical and obviously AI-generated. US recruiters flag that fast. The goal isn't perfect, polished English; it's specific, human English. Keep your real voice and real detail; just clean the grammar.
5. Handle work authorization simply
Don't over-explain. A brief, factual line (or leaving it for the application form) is enough — don't spend resume real estate apologizing for it. Lead with value.
Quick checklist
- Unknown employers/schools have a one-line context anchor
- One page, US format, no personal-data fields
- A real number in most bullets
- Reads human, not like a ChatGPT cleanup
- Keywords match your 2–3 target roles
FAQ
Should I include my GPA / national ranking? Convert it to something a US reader understands ("top 5%") or add brief context. A raw foreign scale means nothing to them.
Is it bad to use AI to fix my English? Using it is fine — shipping the generic, AI-sounding output is the problem. Fix the grammar, then put your specific detail and voice back in.
One page even with 3 years of experience? For students and early-career, yes. Senior roles can justify two — but tight always beats padded.
ResumeHumanizer was built with international applicants in mind: it adds the US-context your employers are missing, keeps your real voice, removes the AI-tell, and keeps you ATS-ready. Check your resume free →

