How to Explain an Employment Gap Without Lying or Apologizing
The Stigma is Fading
Between layoffs, sabbaticals, raising children, and mental health breaks, employment gaps are more common than ever. The worst thing you can do is lie about dates on your resume to cover it up, because a background check will expose it.
How to Format the Gap on Your Resume
Instead of leaving a blank space that raises suspicion, label the gap if it exceeds six months. You can write “Sabbatical” or “Planned Career Break” and include a brief bullet point about what you did: “Took time away to care for an elderly parent while completing a certification in digital marketing.”
How to Address it in the Interview
When the interviewer inevitably asks about the gap, do not apologize, do not over-explain, and do not get defensive. Use the Acknowledge and Pivot technique.
The Formula:
- **Acknowledge:** Briefly state the reason without deep emotional detail.
- **Highlight:** Mention anything constructive you did during that time (reading, volunteering, online courses).
- **Pivot:** Pivot aggressively back to why you are excited to re-enter the workforce specifically for *this* role.
Example: “I intentionally took the last year off to care for a new child. During that time, I kept my skills sharp by completing a Python course on Coursera. Now that my family situation is stable, I’m fully ready to dive back in, and your position as a Data Analyst caught my eye because…”