Employment Gaps Are More Common Than You Think
Most hiring managers have seen hundreds of resumes with gaps. Layoffs, caregiving, health, study, travel, burnout — these are human realities. A gap in itself rarely disqualifies a candidate. How you handle it often matters more than the gap itself.
The biggest mistake candidates make is either over-explaining (turning a gap into a long defensive essay) or trying to hide it (which tends to make recruiters more suspicious when they notice, not less). The professional approach is to acknowledge it briefly, frame it honestly, and move on to your qualifications.
The LoopCV Employment Gap Explainer generates ready-to-use scripts for the three formats where gaps come up — resume bullet, cover letter sentence, and interview answer — based on your specific gap reason and duration.
How to Show a Gap on Your Resume
There are two main approaches to displaying a gap on a resume:
Option 1: List the gap explicitly with a brief label
Add a line in your work history where the gap falls:
*Career Break — Caregiver for family member (2022–2023)*
*Career Break — Personal health (2021–2022)*
*Career Break — Full-time study, [Qualification] (2022–2023)*
This is increasingly common and is recommended by LinkedIn and most modern career advisors. It removes ambiguity and shows you're confident about the gap.
Option 2: Use years only (no months) for dates
If your gap is less than 11 months, switching from "June 2022 – March 2023" to "2022–2023" can absorb short gaps within a single year. This is not deceptive — it's a formatting choice. It doesn't work for gaps that span two calendar years.
What not to do: stretch employment dates to cover the gap, invent freelance work you didn't do, or use vague language like "consulting" without any substance behind it. Background checks are real.
While you're here
Need a ready-to-use script for your gap?
The LoopCV Employment Gap Explainer generates a resume bullet, cover letter sentence, and interview answer based on your specific gap reason. Free, no sign-up.
Generate my gap explanation — freeHow to Explain a Gap in a Cover Letter
You don't need to explain every gap in a cover letter. If the gap is recent or significant (more than 6 months in the last 3 years), a brief sentence is useful — it prevents the recruiter from filling the blank with something worse than the reality.
The cover letter sentence should:
- Be one sentence, maximum two
- Name the reason honestly
- Connect back to your readiness to return
Examples:
*"Following a period of caring for a family member, I'm now fully focused on returning to my career in [field], and this role is exactly the kind of challenge I'm looking for."*
*"I took a planned career break to complete a [qualification/course], which has directly strengthened my background in [relevant area]."*
*"After being affected by the 2023 tech layoffs at [Company], I used the transition period to [upskill/consult/freelance], and I'm now actively seeking a [role type] position."*
Don't apologise for the gap. State it, frame it, and pivot.
How to Talk About a Gap in an Interview
The interview is where most candidates over-explain. The goal is a clear, composed, 30–60 second answer that addresses the gap, demonstrates what you did during it (even if it's personal recovery), and signals your readiness now.
Structure:
1. Name the reason directly (1–2 sentences)
2. What you did during the gap that's relevant (1–2 sentences)
3. What you're bringing back to work (1 sentence)
Example for a health-related gap:
*"I stepped back from work in [year] to manage a health issue. I used the time to complete a [course/certification] and stay current in [area]. I'm fully recovered and ready to contribute — this role aligns well with where I want to take my career."*
Example for a caregiving gap:
*"I took [X months/years] to care for a family member. It's something I'm proud of doing, and I stayed connected to the industry through [freelance work/networking/courses]. I'm now ready to return full-time, and this opportunity is a great fit."*
If pressed further, give the same answer more briefly. Don't add new detail under pressure — it can create the impression that you're constructing a story rather than telling one.
Gap Reasons and How to Frame Each One
Layoff / redundancy: straightforward and sympathetic. Name the company and approximate date. Mention any severance projects, freelance work, or upskilling. Don't speak negatively about the employer.
Caregiving (children, parents, family member): highly relatable. Recruiters respect it. Frame it as a conscious choice you made and are confident about. Don't over-explain.
Health / personal reasons: brief is best. You are not obligated to share medical detail. "I took time off to manage a personal health matter. I'm fully fit to work now." is sufficient and appropriate.
Travel or sabbatical: easy to frame positively for most industries. Note any relevant learning, volunteering, or experience gained.
Study or retraining: almost always positive. Make the connection to the current role explicit — "completing X qualification gave me Y, which directly applies to this role."
Burnout / mental health: increasingly accepted but still requires careful framing. "I took time to recharge and ensure I was returning in the right headspace" is honest without oversharing.