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For paramedics

Paramedic resume
examples, skills, and a free upload.

Paramedic + EMT roles across 911 EMS, hospital ER tech, IFT, and critical-care transport. Upload once, get matched, decide whether to apply. We don't sell your data. Email us any time to delete your profile.

Also written as: EMT, EMT-P, NRP, NREMT Paramedic, Medic, Critical Care Paramedic, Flight Paramedic.

Drop your paramedic resume

PDF, DOCX, or text. Up to 5 MB. ~90 seconds end-to-end.

Paramedic roles we match to

Most candidates upload as one of these:

911 ParamedicHospital ER TechIFT ParamedicCritical Care ParamedicFlight ParamedicTactical EMS

Credentials we recognize

The parser auto-detects these on your resume:

ParamedicNREMT-PEMTAEMTCCP-CFP-C

Paramedic resume example

A strong paramedic summary reads like this. Swap in your own numbers and settings:

Paramedic with six years on a busy county 911 system, running 8 to 12 calls per shift. NRP certified with current ACLS and PALS and a clean driving record. I chart in ESO and hand patients off to Level I and Level II trauma teams every week. Looking for a critical care transport role where I can put my FP-C studying to work.

Skills recruiters search for

These are the terms recruiters and ATS filters look for on a paramedic resume. Use the ones that are true for you:

Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS)Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)Basic Life Support (BLS)911 emergency responsePatient assessmentAirway managementIV access and medication administration12-lead EKG interpretationTrauma careePCR documentation (ESO, ImageTrend)Interfacility transportCritical care transportScene safetyAmbulance operations

How to list your credentials

List your NREMT certification and your state paramedic license on separate lines with expiration dates. Put ACLS, PALS, and BLS right below them so a recruiter can verify current cards without asking.

Resume tips for paramedics

  • Put certifications at the top, right under your name. EMS recruiters scan for NRP and the state license before reading anything else.
  • Quantify call volume. '10 to 14 calls per 12-hour shift' tells a hiring chief more than 'high-volume system.'
  • Say which service types you have run. 911, IFT, critical care, and event standby are different jobs with different skill sets.
  • List your ePCR software by name. ESO, ImageTrend, and Zoll are search filters on the hiring side.
  • Keep expiration dates accurate. An expired card listed as current kills trust fast.
  • If you precept students or new medics, say so. FTO experience moves you up the list for lead and supervisor roles.

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How matching works

  1. 1
    Upload
    Parser fills your name, contact, credentials (Paramedic / NREMT-P / EMT), specialty, state, years of experience.
  2. 2
    Pick public or private
    Public profiles get an indexed page (first name + last initial only). Private profiles only appear in the matching engine — invisible elsewhere.
  3. 3
    Get matched
    Your top matches surface on your private profile page (the edit URL we send on submit), refreshed daily. You decide whether to apply.

FAQ

How do I upload my paramedic / emt resume?

Click "Upload resume" above. PDF, DOCX, or plain text up to 5 MB. Parser pre-fills the fields, you correct anything wrong before saving.

Is it really free?

Yes — for candidates, always. Hiring employers pay our placement fee.

Will recruiters spam me?

No. Your profile is only visible to verified employers with active job posts that match your specialty + state. We don't sell or share data.

Can I delete my profile?

Yes, at any time. Email info@avahealth.co with subject “Delete my profile” and we'll wipe both the resume file and parsed data within 30 days, including from any active employer match queues.

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