Most RN resume examples on the internet are stock templates with placeholder names and bullets that read like job descriptions. They’re not examples of resumes that got someone hired. They’re examples of resumes that got assembled.
Below are three registered nurse resumes built from the candidate types we see succeed in 2026 hospital hiring: a new grad RN landing a med-surg residency, a med-surg RN moving to a progressive care unit, and an experienced MICU nurse stepping up into a charge role. Each one is annotated with what makes it work, what would have killed it, and what an actual unit manager sees when they read it.
The structural reasoning behind these examples is in how to write an RN resume in 2026. Same rules apply.
Example 1: New grad RN, first job
This is Sarah. She graduated from her BSN program two months ago, has zero paid RN experience, and is targeting med-surg residency programs at her local academic medical center. She has 800+ clinical hours, did a med-surg capstone, and worked as a nurse extern on a cardiac unit during her last semester.
- Carried a 4-patient assignment under preceptor supervision; managed admissions, discharges, and shift handoffs using SBAR.
- Charted vitals, I&Os, MAR administration, and Doc Flowsheets in Epic; used Epic Rover for barcode med scanning.
- Recognized worsening sepsis on a post-op patient (rising lactate, falling MAP), escalated to RN preceptor and rapid response team, contributing to early antibiotic administration.
- Participated in interdisciplinary rounds; presented patient updates to the attending and case manager.
- 620 hours across 6 specialty rotations including 80 ICU hours observing vented and pressor management.
- Practiced delegation to PCAs and CNAs; familiar with Epic, Cerner PowerChart from rotation cross-exposure.
- Worked under RN supervision on a 28-bed cardiac telemetry unit; took vitals, performed ADLs, monitored telemetry.
- Recognized two significant rhythm changes (new-onset Afib and a brief run of VT) and reported them to the assigned RN immediately.
Why this works. Sarah’s capstone is written like a real job, with a patient ratio, a charting tool, and a single specific clinical recognition moment that proves judgment. The nurse-extern entry is the second-strongest signal — eight months of supervised paid work on a cardiac telemetry unit reads as “ready for tele residency” instead of “classroom learner.” The Epic Rover mention is the kind of detail residency program coordinators specifically look for. The BSN, the 3.8 GPA, and the Massachusetts compact license at the top give the recruiter everything they need in the first six lines.
Example 2: Med-surg RN moving to a progressive care unit
This is Marcus. Three years on a 30-bed adult med-surg unit at a community hospital, CMSRN-certified, looking to step up to a PCU (progressive care / step-down) role at a larger system.
- Managed 1:5 day shift / 1:6 night shift assignments on a 30-bed med-surg unit with a 12-bed telemetry overflow capacity, including post-surgical, CHF exacerbation, DKA, and stroke rule-out admissions.
- Monitored continuous telemetry and identified rhythm changes (Afib with RVR, second-degree heart block, new-onset SVT) requiring rapid response activation and physician notification.
- Charted in Epic with SmartPhrases and Rover for bedside med admin; precepted 6 new grad RNs through their unit orientation.
- Served as charge nurse on weekends, managing assignments for 5 RNs and 2 PCAs, escalating staffing concerns to the house supervisor.
- Reduced unit fall rate by 22% over 12 months by leading hourly rounding compliance for high-risk Morse-scale patients.
- Initiated and titrated insulin drips, managed PCAs (patient-controlled analgesia pumps), and supported BiPAP setup for CHF exacerbations.
Why this works. Marcus is making the case for PCU and every bullet supports it. He’s named the unit type and ratios precisely. He’s called out the telemetry overflow experience — the bridge between med-surg and a step-down unit. He has CMSRN, which is the credentialing signal that he’s a serious med-surg nurse, not just somebody who works med-surg. He’s named drips (insulin), modalities (BiPAP, PCA), and a measurable outcome (the fall-rate reduction). The charge nurse and precepting bullets show progression. A PCU manager reads this and sees a candidate who can step into the role with minimal orientation.
The telemetry overflow line is the most important sentence on Marcus’s resume. It’s the line that bridges him from med-surg to PCU and avoids the specialty trap. Without it, he’s “just” a med-surg nurse and the PCU recruiter routes him to a separate residency. With it, he’s a PCU-eligible candidate.
Example 3: Experienced MICU RN, stepping into charge
This is Rachel. Five years in a 24-bed MICU at a Level 1 trauma center, CCRN-certified, applying for an internal charge nurse / clinical lead role.
- Managed 1:2 vented assignments on a 24-bed MICU including septic shock, ARDS, DKA, GI bleed, CRRT, and post-cardiac arrest patients.
- Titrated levophed, vasopressin, epinephrine, propofol, fentanyl, and insulin drips; managed multiple central and arterial lines per patient.
- Set up and managed CRRT (continuous renal replacement therapy) for hemodynamically unstable AKI patients in coordination with nephrology.
- Charted in Epic with Rover bedside scanning; built unit-specific SmartPhrases adopted by 18 of 22 unit RNs to standardize handoff documentation.
- Served on the rapid response team for 3 years, attending codes throughout the hospital and leading the post-event huddle for nursing.
- Precepted 8 new grad RNs through the critical care residency program; received the Daisy Award nomination in 2024.
- Reduced unit CAUTI incidence by 40% over 6 months by leading a Foley necessity audit committee with the unit medical director.
Why this works. Every bullet on Rachel’s resume supports the charge-nurse case. She’s named the highest-acuity patient population the unit treats. She’s named the drips by name (not “various vasopressors”). She’s shown initiative (the SmartPhrase library, the CAUTI committee), leadership (precepting, rapid response), and a measurable outcome tied to a quality metric. The Daisy Award nomination is a credibility signal that doesn’t feel like bragging because it’s embedded in a precepting bullet. The committee work in a separate section is the kind of evidence MICU managers use to differentiate charge candidates from clinical staff.
What all three resumes have in common
- Specialty named in the first three lines. Sarah: med-surg / tele residency target. Marcus: med-surg moving to PCU. Rachel: MICU charge. The unit type is never buried.
- Patient ratios and acuity, not adjectives. “1:2 vented MICU,” “1:5 day / 1:6 night med-surg with telemetry overflow.” Numbers travel.
- EHR named explicitly with at least one tool inside it. Epic Rover, SmartPhrases, Cerner PowerChart. Naming the tool is the productivity-on-day-one signal.
- Drips, modalities, and equipment named. Levophed, propofol, BiPAP, CRRT, PCA. Generic “administered medications and managed equipment” tells a recruiter nothing.
- At least one outcome bullet per resume. The CAUTI reduction, the fall-rate reduction, the sepsis recognition. One bullet per resume that has a verb tied to a measurable result.
- Compact license status named. NLC matters in 2026.
- Specialty cert paired with the experience. CMSRN earned during the med-surg years; CCRN earned during the MICU years. Cert and experience reinforce each other.
How to format a registered nurse resume
All three examples above use the same format: reverse chronological, single column, clear section headers. This is not a style choice — it is the format that ATS systems in healthcare (iCIMS, Workday, Taleo) parse most reliably. Avoid two-column layouts, sidebars, and graphics. They look polished in a browser but break when parsed by hospital applicant tracking systems.
One page for new grads, two pages for experienced nurses with certifications, committee work, and precepting history. Every line should earn its space.
Common RN resume mistakes to avoid
Writing duties instead of outcomes. “Provided patient care in the ICU” describes the job. “Managed 1:2 vented assignments on a 24-bed MICU including septic shock, ARDS, and post-cardiac arrest patients” describes what you can handle on day one.
Burying certifications. CCRN, CMSRN, CEN, ACLS — these should be visible in the first third of your resume. Nurse managers use them as search terms when filtering candidates.
Using a generic template. Templates built for corporate roles do not account for clinical rotations, credentials after your name, or EHR systems. Use a template designed for nursing.
How to list nursing skills on your resume
Group skills by category, not in a single comma-separated list. The three examples above all use the same pattern: EHR systems first (Epic, Cerner, with specific modules), then equipment (ventilators, CRRT, IV pumps, telemetry monitors), then specialty areas. This structure lets a recruiter find what they need in seconds instead of scanning a wall of text.
How to pass ATS screening as a registered nurse
Use standard section headers (Experience, Education, Skills — not “My Journey”). Spell out certifications and include the abbreviation: “Certified Critical Care Registered Nurse (CCRN).” Name EHR systems by their exact product names (Epic Rover, not “electronic charting”). Match the job posting’s phrasing where it overlaps with your real experience.
Frequently asked questions
How long should an RN resume be?
One page for new grads. Two pages is acceptable and often preferred for RNs with 5+ years, certifications, precepting, and committee work. Recruiter surveys show a clear preference for two pages on experienced clinical resumes.
What’s the most important section on an RN resume?
The clinical experience section. Specifically, the bullets that name your unit type, patient ratio, acuity, EHR, and at least one measurable outcome. That block is what an RN hiring manager screens before anything else.
Should I include nursing clinicals on my RN resume?
If you’re a new grad, yes — and treat them like jobs, with setting, patient count, and EHR. If you’re experienced, drop them. Clinicals from years ago add no value once you have real RN experience to point to.