How to Explain a Career Gap on Your CV
A gap on your CV can feel bigger to you than it does to the person reading it. Perhaps you were retrenched, cared for someone, recovered from illness, studied, travelled or took longer than expected to find the right role. Whatever the reason, it is not a confession.
When navigating recruitment in South Africa, clarity matters. Recruiters want to understand your timeline, but they are assessing whether your experience is relevant, your skills are current and you are ready for the opportunity ahead. Do not defend your past. Make your present value easy to see.
Is a career gap really a red flag?
Not automatically. Career breaks are part of working life, but an unexplained gap can invite assumptions. A 2026 systematic review found that employers generally treat unemployed or economically inactive applicants less favourably than employed applicants, with the negative effect becoming more noticeable after about 12 months.
But a longer break does not define your employability. Give enough context to close the information gap, then direct attention towards your capability.
Watch: What should I put on my CV if there has been a long break between jobs?
MASA’s FAQ video makes the point clearly: a long gap may hold an application back when it is left unexplained. A short, honest note can answer the immediate question without turning your personal life into public property.
The video covers why an explanation matters, what to write, how to keep it simple and how honesty can support a recruiter in placing you.
What should you put on your CV after a long break?
Create one short, factual entry in your employment history. Give the period a neutral heading, include accurate dates and explain the reason at a level that protects your privacy.
For example:
Career Break: Family Caregiving | March 2024–January 2026
Took time away from formal employment to care for a family member. Maintained industry knowledge through online training and am now available for full-time work.
Or:
Professional Development Break | June 2025–February 2026
Completed an accredited project management course and delivered two volunteer implementation projects.
These examples contain no apologies, emotional detail or lengthy backstory. They answer the obvious question, then shift attention towards readiness and capability.
Research involving more than 9,000 real job applications found that CVs performed better when relevant experience was made more prominent than the gap. Explain the break, but do not let it become the main feature of your CV. Lead with your experience, strongest achievements, technical skills and recent activity.
Use this four-part career gap interview answer
When an interviewer asks about your employment gap, use this structure:
- State what happened: Give a truthful, high-level reason.
- Explain where matters stand now: Confirm that you are ready and able to work.
- Offer current evidence: Mention a course, project, contract, volunteer role or refreshed skill.
- Return to the role: Explain why this opportunity is a sensible next step.
Your gap is one line; your value is the story
A strong CV does not hide the truth, but it establishes the right emphasis. Keep your dates accurate. Add a short employment gap explanation where a long break would create confusion. Then make your experience, achievements and suitability unmistakable.
Your career has not been cancelled because life interrupted your career timeline. Explain the gap without shame, protect the details that are yours to keep and return the conversation to what you can contribute now.
Ready to move forward? Visit MASA’s job search page to explore current opportunities and the staffing support that can help you take your next step with confidence.

