search Matched against the exact job you're applying to

Job Description Keyword Finder

Paste a job posting and your resume to instantly see the keywords it screens for - and exactly which ones you're missing, ranked by importance, with where to add each. Free, no signup.

Step 1 · Your resume
draft

Drop your resume here or browse

PDF · DOC · DOCX  ·  max 2 MB

Step 2 · The job description
check 100% Free, Full Report check No Signup Required check Results in ~1 Minute

What is a job description keyword finder?

A job description keyword finder is a free tool that reads a job posting and extracts the keywords and skills it screens for - the hard skills, tools, and terms a recruiter or ATS matches candidates against. This one also reads your resume and shows which of those keywords you already have and which you're missing, so you know exactly what to add before you apply.

How do I find the keywords in a job description?

Paste the job description and your resume above - no account, no credit card. In about a minute you'll get the job's screening keywords grouped by importance, a match score for how many your resume already contains, and a placement tip for every keyword you're missing.

How It Works

How to Find Job Description Keywords

1

Paste the Job Description and Your Resume

Drop in your PDF or Word resume (or paste it) and paste the job posting you're applying to. Nothing is shared, and you don't need an account.

2

Get the Keyword Gap

The tool extracts the job's screening keywords, ranks them critical to nice-to-have, and checks each against your resume to compute your match score.

3

Add the Missing Keywords

Every missing keyword comes with exactly where to add it on your resume - so you can close the gap and get past the screening software.

What We Find

What Keywords Does the Finder Pull From a Job Description?

code

Hard Skills & Tools

The technologies, platforms, and tools the job names - the terms most likely to be matched literally by screening software.

workspace_premium

Certifications & Qualifications

Named certifications, licenses, degrees, and clearances the posting requires or prefers.

account_tree

Methodologies & Processes

Ways of working the role expects - Agile, Scrum, CI/CD, TDD - phrased the way the job phrases them.

hub

Domain & Industry Terms

The sector language that signals you know the space: fintech, HIPAA, GTM, Series B, supply chain.

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Importance Ranking

Each keyword tagged critical, important, or nice-to-have based on how the job description weights it.

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Where to Add Each

For every missing keyword, the exact spot on your resume to work it in - honestly, using skills you already have.

Sample Result

What the Report Actually Looks Like

Specific to your resume and this job, not a generic list. Here's a real excerpt style.

Missing keyword · Critical

"CI/CD" - the job description mentions continuous integration and deployment three times and lists it under requirements, but it appears nowhere on your resume.

Where to add it: Your bullet about "automated the release process" is exactly this - rename it using the job's words: "Built the team's CI/CD pipeline in GitHub Actions, cutting deploy time from 40 to 6 minutes."

Why Match Your Resume Keywords to the Job Description

The average corporate opening draws 250+ resumes, and most are filtered by software that matches your resume against the job description before a human reads it. A job description keyword finder shows you that match from the screener's side - which of the job's keywords your resume already hits, and which it's missing - so you can fix the gap before a rejection does. Most qualified candidates get filtered out for the same reason: their resume describes the same work in different words than the job posting.

1. Same skill, different words

You wrote "managed deployments"; the job screens for "CI/CD". You have the skill - you just didn't use the word the software is matching on. A resume keyword finder catches these misses so you can rename what you already did.

2. Know what's critical vs. optional

Not every keyword matters equally. This tool ranks the job's missing keywords by importance, so you spend your edits on the ones the job actually screens for - not a wall of undifferentiated terms.

Keep Improving: Related Free Tools & Guides

Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a job description keyword finder? add

It's a free tool that reads a job posting and pulls out the keywords and skills it screens for. This one goes further: it also reads your resume and tells you which of those keywords you already have and which you're missing, ranked by importance, so you know exactly what to add.

How do I find the keywords in a job description? add

Paste the job description and your resume above. In about a minute you'll get the job's screening keywords grouped into critical, important, and nice-to-have, with a match score and a placement tip for every keyword you're missing. No account, no credit card.

Is the keyword finder really free? add

Yes - the full keyword gap report is free: the match score, every matched and missing keyword, the importance ranking, and where to add each. There's no locked section and no signup. Want a full document critique too? Run the free resume review after this one.

Why should I match keywords to the job description? add

The average opening draws 250+ applicants and most are filtered by software that matches your resume against the job description before a human reads it. If your resume doesn't echo the keywords the job screens for, it gets filtered out even when you're qualified. Matching those keywords is one of the highest-leverage things you can do to get more interviews.

Does adding keywords mean lying on my resume? add

No. The goal is to surface skills you already have but didn't name, and to use the same wording the job uses for them. The tool only flags a keyword as missing when it isn't in your resume text; it's up to you to add the ones you genuinely have. Never claim a skill you don't have - it falls apart in the interview.

See the keywords you're missing before you apply.

Run the free keyword finder now - it takes about a minute and no signup.

Fair usage policy: 5 scans per hour, 15 per day. No account required.