Resume Templates
Two-Column Resume Templates
Two-column resume templates use a sidebar for contact, skills, and education, freeing the main column for experience. They fit more on a page and look modern — great for technical and detail-rich roles.
Two-Column
Skills and contact on the left, achievements on the right — a layout that most product managers and UX leads use to stand out from single-column piles.
Preview & use →Metro
Modular grid structure with blue accents — the format that gets callbacks at Microsoft, Salesforce, and mid-market tech companies.
Preview & use →Slate
Dark charcoal header with high contrast body — used by senior finance and operations leaders who want gravitas without heavy graphic design.
Preview & use →Sidebar Pro
Two-column layout with a bold colored sidebar for contact, skills, and education. Inspired by Resume.io's Dublin — great for technical specialists.
Preview & use →Deedy
Homage to the iconic Deedy LaTeX resume — centered name, dense two-column body, red section rules. Beloved by software engineers and data scientists.
Preview & use →Catalyst
Pill-style competencies and achievement sidebar — inspired by how career coaches format resumes for Director-level roles.
Preview & use →Horizon
Emerald gradient header with vibrant accents — the template of choice for startup founders, growth hackers, and VC-backed hires.
Preview & use →Frequently Asked Questions
Are two-column resumes ATS-friendly?
Well-built two-column templates parse fine in most modern ATS. If you're applying through an older system, a single-column template is the safest bet.
Who should use a two-column resume?
Candidates with lots of skills, tools, or certifications to showcase, and technical roles that benefit from a dense, organized layout.
Do two-column templates fit one page?
Yes — the sidebar makes them space-efficient, ideal for fitting a full history on a single page.