How To Display Your Hobbies And Interests On Your CV

How To Display Your Hobbies And Interests On Your CV

So, you’ve got to impress a recruiter you’ve never met, using just one or two pieces of A4 paper that give a brief overview of who you are - it sounds crazy, right?

 

But this is the reality of job hunting and it’s therefore understandable that you want to cram your CV full of information about what makes you so great.

 

The problem is, recruiters spend as little as six or seven seconds scanning a CV, so you don’t have long to win them over. This might have left you wondering whether a hobbies and interests section is worth including – is it a sheer waste of space, or could it increase your chances of landing an interview?

 

In this guide, we’ll look at whether or not you should include a ‘hobbies and interest’ section on your CV and how to make it work in your favour if you do:

 

Should you include hobbies and interests on your CV?

 

There are several good reasons both for and against including hobbies on your CV. To help you make an informed decision, we’ve broken this down into two lists:

 

Yes:

 

You might choose to showcase your hobbies if:

 

  • You have limited experience, are a student or have recently graduated
  • They’re relevant to the role you're applying for
  • They’ve helped you to develop transferable skills
  • They make you look like a genuinely interesting person
  • You believe they can help you to stand out from other candidates
  • You’ve decided to make a career change and don't have any industry experience

 

No:

 

On the other hand, including your hobbies and interest can take up valuable space on your CV – so it’s important to be selective. It’s best not to include your hobbies if:

 

  • You have plenty of relevant work experience and have limited CV space
  • They aren't relevant to the role or industry
  • They aren't appropriate or could make you look unprofessional
  • They’re very generic and won’t add value to your candidacy
     

Where should you put your hobbies and interests section?

 

As a general rule, the hobbies and interests section should go at the bottom of your CV, underneath your education or work experience (depending on which CV structure you’ve chosen).

 

Why? Well, while they can help your application, they generally won’t make more of an impact on a recruiter’s decision than your experience, skills and qualifications.

 

What are good and bad hobbies to include?

 

Hopefully, you're beginning to understand whether you should include your hobbies or not, but to help you further this section will run through some of the best and worst hobbies for a CV.

 

Good hobbies might include learning a new language, sports teams, volunteer work, writing or blogging, strategy games, travel, coding, graphic design or running marathons.

 

These types of hobbies show dedication, passion, commitment, time-management and other important skills you could apply in the workplace. Make sure to mention the transferable skills you’ve gained in your CV.

 

However, hobbies that are commonplace like eating out, reading or socializing – while great - aren’t going to make you stand out from other applicants and aren’t worth including.

 

What’s more, you should avoid any sensitive areas such as political or religious hobbies and anything passive like watching sports or television.

 

Is it ever OK to lie or exaggerate about your hobbies?

 

Of course, you want to impress the recruiter and make yourself look like a passionate and interesting person, but it’s never a good idea to lie or exaggerate on your CV.

 

This includes adding hobbies or interests you don’t really have - and if you’ve only done something once or twice, don't try to make it sound like you’ve been dedicated to it for years.

 

CV lies always have a way of catching up with you. If a recruiter asks you questions about something you’ve listed and you cannot answer, or if they do some digging of their own and find out you were lying, you’ll look foolish and unprofessional.

 

Displaying hobbies and interests on your CV

 

Taking into consideration all of the above, you should only include hobbies on your CV if they're relevant to the role, they're particularly interesting, or you need to make up for a lack of experience.

 

Be sure to put this section at the bottom of your CV and highlight the transferable skills you feel you’ve gained!

 

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Andrew Fennell is the founder of CV writing advice website StandOut CV – he is a former recruitment consultant and contributes careers advice to websites like Business Insider, The Guardian and Fast Company.