Swiss CV Length: How Many Pages by Career Stage
There is no single right answer to how long a Swiss CV should be. The correct length depends on where you are in your career and what the role demands. The real rule is simpler than a page count: every line must earn its place. This guide gives you concrete length targets by profile, plus exactly what to cut when you run over.
The general rule in Switzerland
Swiss recruiters expect a focused, scannable document — usually one to two pages. Unlike the United States, the Swiss market does not insist on a single page, and unlike some academic traditions it does not reward sprawling self-descriptions. A first reader typically spends well under a minute on each CV, so density and clarity beat length every time.
Length is a consequence, not a goal. You do not pad a thin CV to reach two pages, and you do not squeeze twenty years into one. You include what is relevant to this vacancy and let the page count fall where it lands within a sensible range.
Length by career stage
Students and recent graduates: one page. With limited professional history, one well-structured page is almost always enough. Lead with education, then internships, part-time work, relevant projects, and language skills. A second page here signals padding rather than substance.
Juniors (roughly 0–3 years): one page, occasionally spilling to two. Once you have a couple of real roles, one tight page is still the target. Move to two only if you genuinely have enough substantive, relevant content — not to fill space.
Mid-level (around 3–10 years): two pages. This is the comfortable home of the Swiss CV. Two pages let you show progression, quantified achievements, and the breadth that a hiring manager wants to see, without drifting into a life story.
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Senior and executive (10+ years): two pages, sometimes a focused third. Even with a long history, discipline matters. Keep the first page strong with a profile summary and recent, high-impact roles. Compress early positions to a line or two. A third page is acceptable only when the seniority truly justifies it — and only if every line still pulls its weight.
Academic and research profiles: as long as needed. This is the deliberate exception. An academic CV legitimately runs to several pages because publications, conferences, grants, and teaching are the evidence base. For a non-academic role, however, you should write a short professional CV instead and keep the full academic record separate.
What to cut when you run over
If you are over your target, cut in this order:
- ●Old roles in detail. Positions older than 10–15 years can shrink to a single line or be grouped under "Earlier experience."
- ●Generic duties. Replace "responsible for various tasks" with one measurable result.
- ●Obvious skills. Microsoft Office and "team player" rarely earn their line.
- ●Repetition. If three roles taught the same thing, say it once.
- ●Long personal sections. Hobbies and a paragraph-long profile are usually the first to trim.
A tip that recruiters notice: never let a single line of a role spill alone onto a new page. Tighten the wording so the page break falls cleanly between sections.
Density versus whitespace
Fitting more on the page is not the same as making it readable. A wall of nine-point text is harder to assess than a slightly longer but breathable layout. Aim for a 10–11 point body font, clear section headings, consistent spacing, and enough margin that the eye can move. If you must choose between a cramped one page and a clean two pages, choose the clean two pages — for a mid or senior profile, that is the expected format anyway.
Good whitespace also helps applicant tracking systems and the human skimming behind them. Clear structure means the right keywords land in the right sections, where they are easy to find.
Get the length right with CVSwiss
The simplest way to hit the right length is to start from a template built for Swiss expectations and let the layout guide you. Build your Swiss CV with CVSwiss — pick a clean, recruiter-tested format from our CV templates, fill in only what matters, and you will land naturally within one to two well-structured pages.
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