Back to Blog

Top CV Builders for the UK Market (No 'Pay-to-Download' Tricks)

It’s the most deceptive practice in the job-seeking world: the "freemium" CV builder.

You find a site with beautiful templates. You spend an hour perfecting your document. You click "download," and you're directed to a payment page.

It turns out "free to build" isn't the same as "free to have."

Many of the biggest names rely on this model:

  • Zety: A fantastic builder, but downloading your finished CV requires a paid subscription.
  • MyPerfectCV: This service will often let you build, but the final download is locked behind a trial or full subscription.
  • Kickresume: Offers a limited plan, but the best templates, AI features, and download options are reserved for paid users.

If you're tired of the "bait-and-switch," we've compiled a list of the best, most powerful options for UK job seekers.

The Top CV-Building Options

1. VacanCV (The All-in-One Powerhouse)

The Good: We'll be biased, but we built this to be the solution. VacanCV provides all the tools you need in one platform. All templates are professional and ATS-friendly. All AI-writing features are included. There are no "gotchas."

The Catch: It’s not just a CV builder; it’s an integrated platform. You also get a job tracker and career planner, which might be more than you’re looking for (but we think you'll love it).

Best for: Everyone. The job seeker who wants a powerful, ATS-friendly CV without any paywalls.

2. Canva

The Good: If you are a graphic designer, Canva has thousands of beautiful, visually-driven templates.

The Catch: The vast majority are not ATS-friendly. They use tables, columns, and graphics that will confuse recruitment software. It’s also 100% manual—no AI writing help.

Best for: Creative roles (like design) where a portfolio is more important than an ATS scan.

3. Google Docs

The Good: It's simple and universally accessible. You can find some good, basic, ATS-friendly templates online to copy and paste.

The Catch: It's entirely manual. Formatting is clumsy, and you have to write every single word yourself. It’s functional, but not powerful.

Best for: The minimalist who wants total manual control and is confident in their writing and formatting skills.

4. LinkedIn

The Good: Your LinkedIn profile is already a "living CV." You can download a PDF version of it directly from your profile page.

The Catch: The formatting is basic, clunky, and not customisable. It often runs to 3-4 pages and includes irrelevant sections like "Recommendations."

Best for: A very quick download when you need a CV in 10 seconds, but not for a serious application.

5. FlowCV / Reactive Resume

The Good: These open-source projects are often genuinely powerful and focused on simplicity and clean, ATS-friendly design.

The Catch: The features are basic. They lack the AI-writing power, job-tracking integration, and professional polish of a dedicated platform like VacanCV.

Best for: Tech-savvy users and developers who appreciate open-source principles.

You don't need to choose between a deceptive pricing trap and a basic manual tool. You deserve a powerful, professional solution.