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For radiologic technologists

Radiologic Technologist resume
examples, skills, and a free upload.

Rad Tech roles across hospital imaging, outpatient centers, and specialty modalities (CT, MRI, IR, mammo). 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: Rad Tech, Radiology Tech, X-Ray Tech, RT(R), Radiographer, Radiologic Technician.

Drop your radiologic technologist resume

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

Radiologic Technologist roles we match to

Most candidates upload as one of these:

Hospital Rad TechCT TechMRI TechMammography TechInterventional Rad Tech

Credentials we recognize

The parser auto-detects these on your resume:

ARRT(R)ARRTRT(R)

Radiologic Technologist resume example

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

ARRT registered Radiologic Technologist, RT(R), with six years split between a Level II trauma hospital and an outpatient imaging center. I average 30 to 40 exams per shift across general diagnostic, portables, OR fluoro, and trauma cases, charting in Epic Radiant. Cross-trained in CT and sitting for the CT registry this year. Active state license and BLS, with a low repeat rate I track and can speak to.

Skills recruiters search for

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

ARRT (R) registeredDiagnostic radiographyPortable imagingOR fluoroscopy and C-armTrauma imagingCT cross-trainingEpic RadiantPACSPatient positioningRadiation safety and ALARAIV contrast administrationQuality controlBLS certification

How to list your credentials

Use the exact ARRT format, like RT(R) or RT(R)(CT), right after your name and in a credentials section. Add your state license below it if your state requires one, with the state and status.

Resume tips for radiologic technologists

  • Write your credential exactly the way ARRT formats it, like RT(R) or RT(R)(CT). Recruiters search the exact string.
  • List your modalities and how often you work each one. Cross-training in CT or mammo is often what gets the call.
  • Name your equipment vendors. A department that runs Siemens machines wants to see Siemens on your resume.
  • Include exam volume per shift and which settings you covered. ER and OR experience carries weight.
  • If you float between hospital and outpatient, say so. It signals you can handle both the pace and the patient mix.

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How matching works

  1. 1
    Upload
    Parser fills your name, contact, credentials (ARRT(R) / ARRT / RT(R)), 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 radiology tech 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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