Resume Skills Section 2026: Format, Order, AI Tools
How to write your resume skills section in 2026: category grouping, ATS formatting, which AI tools belong, and what to cut. Includes before/after examples.
Updated April 25, 20266 min readWritten by the MatchResume.ai team
Try MatchResume FreeKey takeaways
- A grouped skills section parses cleanly in ATS and reads faster to humans than an undifferentiated list.
- Lead with your most relevant and differentiated skills — not alphabetical order.
- Remove skills you listed five years ago that are now entry-level assumptions: Git, Slack, basic HTML.
Why the Skills Section Matters More in 2026
ATS systems in 2026 are more sophisticated but still keyword-dependent. Hiring managers who review dozens of resumes daily scan the skills section in 3–5 seconds to decide whether to read further. A poorly formatted or outdated skills section fails both audiences.
The addition of AI tools as a distinct category means most tech resumes now need 4–5 skill groups instead of one undifferentiated list.
The Category Grouping Format That Works
Group your skills under plain text labels. Each group is a label followed by a colon, then a comma-separated list on the same line.
Recommended format
Before
Skills: Python JavaScript TypeScript React Node.js AWS Docker SQL Git GitHub Copilot LangChain
After
Languages: Python, TypeScript, SQL Frameworks: React, Next.js, Node.js, LangChain AI Dev Tools: GitHub Copilot, Claude Code, Cursor Cloud & DevOps: AWS (EC2, S3, Lambda), Docker, GitHub Actions
How to Order Categories
Put the most impactful category first. For most 2026 tech roles, that means leading with your primary language or framework, then AI tools, then cloud.
- Primary languages and core frameworks
- AI Dev Tools (agentic coding, LLM libraries)
- Cloud and infrastructure
- Databases
- Testing and tooling
AI tools have moved up the stack because hiring managers now scan for them early in the review.
Skills to Cut: The 'Everyone Has This' Problem
Every skill you list that a recruiter expects every candidate to have weakens the signal of the skills you actually want to highlight.
- ✓Git (universal assumption for developers)
- ✓Slack, Jira, Trello, Notion (team tools)
- ✓HTML and CSS listed alone without a framework
- ✓'Agile' or 'Scrum' as standalone skills
- ✓Microsoft Office, Google Docs
- ✓VS Code (it's an editor, not a skill)
Before/After: Flat List vs Grouped Modern Format
Full skills section transformation
Before
Technical Skills: Python, JavaScript, HTML, CSS, React, Node.js, SQL, MongoDB, Git, AWS, Docker, Jira, Slack, Agile, REST APIs, ChatGPT, Copilot, TypeScript, Jest
After
Languages: Python, TypeScript, SQL Frameworks: React, Node.js, Express, Jest AI Dev Tools: GitHub Copilot, Claude Code, GPT-4o API Cloud & DevOps: AWS (EC2, S3, RDS), Docker, GitHub Actions Databases: PostgreSQL, MongoDB
Skills Section Checklist
- ✓Skills grouped into 3–5 named categories
- ✓AI Dev Tools listed as a separate category
- ✓No more than 20 skills total
- ✓No skills you can't defend in an interview
- ✓Exact product names used (GitHub Copilot, not 'AI assistant')
- ✓No tables, columns, or icon lists (breaks ATS)
- ✓Outdated/universal skills removed
FAQ
Should the skills section go at the top or bottom?
For tech roles, place it near the top — after summary, before experience — or as a sidebar. For roles where experience is the main screen, after experience is fine.
Can I include AI tools I only know from courses?
Only if you've used them on real projects. Course-only knowledge that gets probed in an interview is a liability, not an asset.
Is there a standard format that works across all ATS?
Simple pipe-separated or comma-separated lists under plain text headings are safest. Avoid columns, tables, or icon-only skills lists.
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