π CV Tips for Hospitality Jobs
How to write a CV that gets you interviews β even if you have no formal qualifications. Specific tips for cleaners, hosts, maintenance, managers, drivers, and guides.
No experience? Here's what to highlight
Hospitality employers care more about attitude, reliability, and people skills than formal qualifications. Focus on transferable skills from any background:
Communication
Retail work, volunteering, school projects
Teamwork
Sports teams, clubs, group projects, community activities
Time management
Balancing multiple responsibilities, meeting deadlines
Problem-solving
Any situation where you identified and resolved an issue
Reliability
Perfect attendance, long-term commitments, references
Cultural awareness
Travel experience, language skills, diverse social circles
What to highlight for each role
π§Ή Cleaner / Housekeeper
- βRooms per hour / rooms per day
- βKnowledge of cleaning chemicals and safety (HACCP)
- βTrustworthiness and discretion with guest belongings
- βPhysical stamina and efficiency under time pressure
π Check-in Host
- βCustomer service experience (any industry)
- βLanguage skills β list with CEFR level
- βPMS system familiarity (Opera, Cloudbeds, etc.)
- βProblem resolution examples with outcomes
π§ Maintenance Technician
- βTechnical certifications (electrical, plumbing, HVAC)
- βEmergency repair response time
- βSafety compliance and signage
- βCMMS experience (Hotelogix, Maintenance Connection)
π Property Manager
- βOccupancy rates and RevPAR you've achieved
- βPortfolio size (number of properties/rooms)
- βTeam size managed
- βVendor management and cost savings
πΊοΈ Tour Guide / Driver
- βLanguages and CEFR levels
- βTour types and group sizes
- βClean driving record / license class
- βCustomer ratings if available
7 actionable tips
Tailor every application
β Don't:
βSend the same CV to 20 hotelsβ
β Do:
βCustomize skills section for each property typeβ
π‘ For luxury hotel: emphasize attention to detail. For hostel: emphasize energy and adaptability.
Quantify everything
β Don't:
β"Responsible for guest check-ins"β
β Do:
β"Processed 40+ check-ins daily with 99% accuracy"β
π‘ Numbers make achievements concrete and memorable.
Lead with action verbs
β Don't:
β"Was responsible for cleaning rooms"β
β Do:
β"Maintained 20 rooms daily to 5-star hygiene standards"β
π‘ Use: Assisted, Coordinated, Managed, Resolved, Maintained, Trained, Facilitated.
Highlight soft skills with evidence
β Don't:
β"Good communication skills"β
β Do:
β"Resolved guest complaints with 95% satisfaction rate; trained 5 new team members"β
π‘ Every soft skill claim needs a specific example.
Include relevant keywords
β Don't:
βIgnoring the job description languageβ
β Do:
βMirror key terms from the job postingβ
π‘ Keywords: PMS, Opera, HACCP, POS, CRM, OTA, RevPAR, channel manager.
Show progression if possible
β Don't:
βListing jobs without contextβ
β Do:
β"Promoted from Room Attendant to Floor Supervisor within 8 months"β
π‘ Any growth, even informal, shows initiative.
Add a strong professional summary
β Don't:
βStarting with a long list of dutiesβ
β Do:
βOpen with 3-4 sentences summarising your valueβ
π‘ "Hospitality professional with 3+ years in luxury hotel ops. 4.9/5 guest rating. Fluent in Greek, English, German."
Common mistakes to avoid
- βGrammar and spelling errors β proofread 3 times, then ask someone else
- βGeneric objective statement β "Seeking a challenging role in a dynamic company"
- βListing duties instead of achievements β what did you accomplish?
- βUnprofessional email address β use firstname.lastname@email.com
- βMissing certifications β food safety, first aid, driving license, IELTS
- βNo languages section β even basic conversational skills matter in tourism
- βToo long β entry-level: 1 page max. 10+ years: 2 pages max
Ready to apply?
Browse verified hospitality vacancies and apply in 2 minutes.
