Rezi vs Resume-Now: Explore the differences in AI writing, resume scoring, templates, and cover letter tools to find the right fit for you.


Resume builders are there to make your job search easier. But finding the right one can be a job in itself. So, I’ve done the legwork for you by comparing two popular resume builders: Rezi vs. Resume-Now.
Full disclosure: I lean toward Rezi (for good reason). But to keep this fair, I built the same resume on both platforms using identical details. Same experience, same skills, same target role. I focused on how each handled bullet points, AI suggestions, formatting, and overall optimization to see which one actually strengthens your application.
But if you’d rather see how Rezi works firsthand, try our free AI Resume Builder. Just enter your details and get an ATS-friendly, tailored resume in minutes.
You can also see how Rezi stacks up against other resume builders:
Resume Builder Overview
Here’s what I’ll be comparing in my review of Rezi vs. Resume-Now:
- Templates and Formatting
- Resume Sections
- AI Bullet Points
- AI Skill Suggestions
- AI Summary Writer
- Feedback and Scoring
- AI Cover Letter
- Additional Features
- Pricing Plans
- Customer Reviews
Short on time? Here’s a quick overview of both platforms and their standout features.
Rezi
Everything about Rezi focuses on one outcome: helping you create a resume that performs well with ATS. The templates are intentionally minimal, and the integrated tools make everything more impactful and efficient. The AI connects your resume, cover letter, job description, and interview prep into one ecosystem.
Here are some of my favorite Rezi features:
- AI Keyword Targeting: Upload a job description and instantly see which keywords you’ve included and what you’re missing.
- AI Bullet Point Writer: Generates achievement-focused bullet points tailored to your role, with the ability to create quantified results.
- Rezi Score: A built-in scoring system that evaluates your resume across content quality, formatting, optimization, and job-readiness, updating in real time as you edit.
- AI Resume Agent: A built-in AI career assistant that answers questions about resumes, ATS best practices, job search strategies, and tailored career advice.
- AI Interview Practice: Generates interview questions based on your resume and job description, with interactive practice and performance feedback.
Here’s the resume I built with Rezi:

Resume-Now
Resume-Now is an easy-to-use builder with a wide range of templates and a simple building process that walks you through each section. However, its AI features can be surface-level, leaning toward rewording rather than strengthening impact with metrics or keywords. It provides solid support and inspiration, but you’ll likely need to bring more of the strategy yourself.
Here’s a rundown of the standout features:
- Customizable Templates: A wide variety of professional, mostly ATS-friendly designs with visual flexibility.
- Enhance with AI: Allows you to highlight specific content or entire sections for AI-based rewording and phrasing suggestions throughout your resume.
- Live Resume Preview: Real-time visual feedback as you build, so you always see how your edits affect the overall layout and flow.
- AI Cover Letter: A structured step-by-step system that prompts you for experience level, strengths, working style, career gaps, and more, shaping your letter as you go.
Here’s what the finished resume looks like:

Now, let’s take a closer look at the key differences between these two resume builders.
Templates and Formatting
Pretty designs, bold formatting, and eye-catching colors. It’s these templates that often suck you in. But less is often more in the resume world. Not only can you confuse ATS systems with too many design features, but you also take the attention away from your content. A recruiter wants to know if you’re qualified, not your skills for color matching.
Let’s see if these platforms sway more towards professionalism or aesthetics.
Rezi
Rezi’s templates are designed to pass Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS). You won’t find bold colors or multi-column layouts, but that’s all intentional. These designs are structured to work across industries, such as tech, healthcare, finance, education, or anything in between.
All the templates are minimal to keep the focus on your content. So, if you’re expecting a Canva-style playground, this isn’t that. But if you want something recruiters can actually skim through, there are plenty of solid options.
Here’s a glimpse of our ATS-friendly template gallery:

You also still get customization without breaking ATS rules:
- Toggle contact icons on or off
- Optional photo (only if your industry expects it, like modeling or acting)
- Font style (Merriweather, Source Sans Pro, Calibri, and Times New Roman)
- Font size (8.5 to 11pt)
- Spacing and line height
- Indented bullet points
- Optional section dividers
- A4 or Letter sizing
- 12 accent colors for a subtle personality
Learn more about how to format your resume:
Resume-Now
Resume-Now offers around 35 templates, a healthy number without being overwhelming. Most designs are simple, single-column layouts that do well with ATS compatibility. They also avoid excessive graphics, tables, and images (for the most part).
You have the flexibility to choose layouts that maximize space if you have a lot of experience, or ones with wider indentation if you’re lighter on content but still want to fill up the space.
My only gripe? Many templates automatically place skills right below the summary. For new job seekers who aren’t familiar with the common resume structure, this can unintentionally push work experience down the page, and in many cases, experience deserves top billing.
That said, the formatting controls are generous:
- 21 font styles
- Font size from 8pt to 14pt
- Heading sizes up to 24pt (a little excessive, honestly)
- Spacing, margins, indents
- Line weight
- Section reordering
- Built-in spell check
Here are just a few of their resume templates:

Check out more tried-and-tested resume templates:
- Professional Resume Templates
- Free MS Word Resume Templates
- Free Google Docs Resume Template
- Best Resume Templates and Examples
Resume Sections
A great builder doesn’t just have the right resume sections (aka, the bare minimum). It should be easy to work your way through the process and flexible enough to add or move around sections if it strengthens your application.
Both platforms deliver here, with some minor differences.
Rezi
Rezi organizes your resume into guided tabs that walk you through the entire resume-building process, so you’re never left staring at the screen wondering where to begin.
You have all the basics:
- Contact
- Summary/Objective
- Work Experience
- Education
- Skills
And optional extra resume sections:
- Projects
- Certifications
- Coursework
- Involvement
- Awards & Honors
- Publications
- References

Instead of feeling overwhelmed by all the details you need to include, you get prompts and fill-in-the-blanks that nudge you in the right direction. Plus, most sections include AI features, so you can generate entire summaries, skills, or work experience entries to speed up the process.
Resume-Now
Resume-Now also makes the resume-building process easy by walking you through the typical sections, including:
- Header
- Experience
- Education
- Skills
- Summary
You can also add extra sections, such as:
- Certifications & Licenses
- Websites & Social Links
- Languages
- Awards & Honors
- Activities
- References

One feature I appreciate is the live preview. As you build each section, you can see how your resume looks in real time. That visual feedback helps prevent formatting surprises at the end.
Learn more about what to include in the key parts of your resume:
- Personal Details in a Resume
- How to List Education on a Resume
- How to Write a Perfect Resume Work Experience Section
AI Bullet Points
Your resume bullet points have two main jobs: to show your experience and to prove your impact. Both to show exactly how you can contribute to your future company. The ideal resume builder should offer suggestions and AI improvements with this goal in mind.
I’ve included some examples to see how both platforms can transform your bullet points.
Rezi
Rezi’s AI Bullet Point Generator is a quick way to fill out your work experience bullets while sounding professional and achievement-focused. All you need to do is enter your role details, and it generates bullets based on your actual input (not random filler).
Here’s what the AI Bullet Point Generator came up with based on my background:

You can choose standard achievement bullets or quantified ones that incorporate metrics. And yes, numbers make everything stronger and more credible. “Improved sales” is fine, but “Increased sales by 32% in Q2” is better.
Don’t like what you see? You can edit or regenerate as many times as you like until you’re happy with the result. You can also highlight any of your existing text to get a quick rewrite.
Here are some of the suggested rewrite options:

As you can see, it doesn’t just change a few words and call it a day. It actually adds more depth and specifics to show the scope and extent of your work.
Resume-Now
Resume-Now’s “Enhance with AI” gives you over 50 bullet suggestions based on your job title. That sounds impressive until you realize many are pretty generic. While they’re tailored to my background, they don’t go into specific skills or add much depth.
Here are just a few of the AI suggestions:

They work more as inspiration starters, so you’ll personalize them. And notably, none of the suggestions included metrics or percentages, which is a missed opportunity.
You can also use the AI enhancement feature to improve your existing bullet points, but that mostly just swaps verbs for synonyms.
Take a look:

It’s slightly more concise, but it’s far from transformative.
Find out more about writing standout bullet points:
AI Skill Suggestions
Your skills section is your golden opportunity to show skim-reading recruiters you have what they’re looking for while making your resume more ATS-friendly. Both recruiters and ATS often search your resume for specific keywords from the job posting to see if you’re a match. It’s the job of a resume builder to help connect those needs to your application.
Here’s how Rezi and Resume-Now help you identify and include the right resume skills.
Rezi
Rezi’s AI Skills Explorer lets you type in a skill (like “customer service”) and see related in-demand skills. And to make this section more balanced, you can search with the following categories: hard skills, soft skills, technical skills, and languages.
You’re not just getting basic abilities like “communication” and “positive attitude”. Rezi will suggest specific tools and software popular within your industry.
Here’s a snapshot of the AI Skills Explorer:

Resume-Now
Resume-Now provides 50+ skill suggestions based on your job title. I found some of them to be more specific and tailored, while others are just generic resume soft skills like “adaptability” or “problem-solving.”

There’s also no filtering system by category, which would’ve helped a lot, given all the options you have available. Plus, some suggestions repeat what you already have listed.
Another letdown is the AI enhancement tool (again). It mostly just rephrases your existing skills, such as changing ‘ChatGPT’ to ‘ChatGPT utilization’ and ‘Career Advice’ to ‘Career Guidance.’ Still, it could be useful for making small tweaks or to avoid repetition.
Take a look at more popular skills to include on your resume:
- AI Skills for Your Resume
- Best Hard Skills for a Resume
- The Best Skills to Put on a Resume
- Transferable Skills Examples for Resumes
AI Summary Writer
Your summary is often the first thing recruiters see. In just a few lines, you’re expected to sum up the highlights of your entire professional background and create that all-important first impression. So yes, it can be daunting. A decent resume builder should nudge you in the right direction, but a great builder is capable of writing the whole thing for you.
Let’s find out which lane Rezi and Resume-Now fall into.
Rezi
With the AI Resume Summary Writer, you can either generate a resume summary from your existing document or input the target job title directly, which is especially helpful if you’re pivoting careers.
All you need to do is enter your title and key skills, and it drafts a tailored summary instantly. You can also regenerate it as many times as you like, or edit until it sounds like you.
Here’s the information I provided:

Here’s what the AI Summary Generator came up with based on my input and resume:

I like how it naturally weaves in the skills by focusing on results, rather than keyword stuffing and sounding like a copy-and-paste of the job description.
Resume-Now
Resume-Now generates 20+ summary suggestions based on your resume data. Some are highly relevant. Others are oddly off-target and need to be more tailored (I saw a student summary pop up despite graduating over ten years ago).
That said, you can refine results by entering a job title, which helps if you’re changing careers and don’t want to rely on the details in your resume.
Check out these summary suggestions:

Again, the AI enhancement was disappointing as it mostly rewrites existing content rather than reshaping it to create more impact.
Feedback and Scoring
It’s never pleasant to hear nothing back after applying for a job, not even a corporate rejection email. Were your qualifications not good enough? Or was your resume to blame? With feedback and scoring, you can at least get clarity on the latter.
Both platforms include feedback, but let’s see if they actually help improve your resume.
Rezi
As part of the ATS Resume Checker, you can see how well your resume is doing through your personal Rezi Score and the Real-Time Analysis tool.
The Rezi Score gives you a rating from 1 to 100 based on five key categories:
- Content
- Formatting
- Optimization
- Best Practices
- Application Readiness.
It then runs over 20 checks across these categories and compares your resume against the job description you upload.

With the Real-Time Analysis feature, you can also see updates (you guessed it) in real time as you edit. That instant feedback loop is incredibly useful because you’re not just guessing what to fix, and you don’t have to spend as much time tweaking once you’re finished.
Here’s a look at how it breaks down feedback for each job entry:

Resume-Now
Resume-Now has a ‘Review’ page that offers suggestions on best practices, spelling, and grammar. You can also select ‘Tips’ as you’re writing to get real-time feedback. It tells you the suggestions, and you can accept or dismiss any changes.
Honestly, the suggestions were a hit-or-miss. Some of them were genuinely useful, like reordering my skills to put the most relevant ones at the top. While others were too vague or plain pointless. For example, it wanted to change ‘SKILLS’ (the template default) to ‘Skills’.

What’s missing is a scoring system. It would be handy to have a rough idea of how competitive my resume is overall and if it’s ready to send to employers.
AI Cover Letter
The dreaded cover letter. You don’t want to repeat your resume, but you also don’t want to ramble with pointless filler. AI tools come in handy because they take details from your resume as a base, while also letting you emphasize certain skills or experiences that are difficult to elaborate on in your resume bullet points.
Let’s see how effective each platform is at delivering a memorable cover letter.
Rezi
Rezi’s AI Cover Letter Generator connects directly to your experience and desired job. All you need to do is enter the job title, company, and relevant skills, and it drafts a tailored letter based on the information you provide.
Want a more tailored document? You can also upload a resume first to extract more accurate details, such as a specific position or educational background. Everything stays connected in your dashboard, which makes applying to multiple jobs smoother.
Here’s a preview from the AI Cover Letter Generator using my own resume:

Resume-Now
Before you start writing, Resume-Now asks how many years of experience you have. Based on that, you get a series of templates to match your career level. While the range of designs is slightly overkill for something as simple as a cover letter, most of them are fairly minimal.
Once you select a template, you can import your existing resume or build the cover letter from scratch. If starting fresh, you’ll enter your target job title, company name, and job description.
From there, the builder walks you through guided prompts. You can select up to three job-related skills and choose your top three strengths (typically soft skills) to highlight. It also asks for extra context, such as:
- Your previous job title
- Whether you need to explain a career gap
- Your working style (e.g., leader, creator, analyzer)
- Option to add a digital signature
This approach can be helpful if you’re unsure what to include because it forces you to think through your positioning. It’s almost like filling out an application form that then gets shaped into a letter.
Here’s a preview of the Resume-Now cover letter:

Check out these tips and examples on how to write your cover letter:
- What Should a Cover Letter Include
- Basic Cover Letter Tips and Examples
- Best Cover Letters: Examples, Templates, and Writing Tips
Additional Features
Most resume builders have the basics: guidance, bullet point suggestions, and templates. It’s the extra features that take a resume platform to the next level. Having solid AI features to improve your job search, application, and interview skills is ideal if you’re looking for the whole package.
Let’s see how these additional features compare.
Rezi
- AI Keyword Scanner: After you paste in a job description, this feature scans it and shows you which keywords you’re missing in your resume. It doesn’t just point them out; it suggests ways to weave them into your bullet points naturally, so your resume aligns better with ATS systems without sounding robotic.
- AI Job Search: Type in your job title and location, and Rezi shows all the current openings. The jobs come straight from company career pages, which saves you from hopping between a dozen tabs. You can bookmark roles and quickly tailor your resume to match each one.
- AI Resume Agent: Think of this as your career assistant. It answers questions about resume writing, ATS optimization, job search strategies, and overall career planning. You can also ask it custom questions, and it responds with advice tailored to your background and goals.
- AI Interview: This tool generates interview questions and suggested answers based on both your resume and the job description you’re targeting. You can practice with voice features and simulate being on camera, then receive feedback to help refine your responses.
Resume-Now
- Enhance with AI: This feature is available throughout the resume builder. You can apply it to entire sections or highlight individual sentences for suggestions. While the revisions often focus on minor wording tweaks rather than major improvements, they can still help reword phrasing if you’re stuck.
- Job Search: Resume-Now includes a job board where you can filter roles by location and job title. When you apply, it redirects you to the employer’s website. You can also select a resume or cover letter and let the AI adjust it to better match the job description.
- Interview Prep: You’ll find a list of standard interview questions with space to draft your responses or review suggested answers. It covers the basics, but the questions aren’t customized to your resume or the specific job you’re applying for, and there’s no built-in feedback system.
Pricing Plans
Let’s cut to the chase; money is a big deciding factor, especially if you’re between jobs. While different resume builders come with various price tags, they should all be transparent and not surprise you with unexpected paywalls.
And so you don’t need to dig for pricing details, here’s everything you need to know.
Rezi
Rezi was designed to help job seekers. And let’s be honest, job hunting isn’t exactly cheap. With that in mind, you can download your resume and use most of the basic AI features completely free-of-charge.
Here’s what’s included in the free plan:
- 1 resume limit
- Limited AI features
- AI Resume Writer
- AI Resume Editor
- AI Resume Summary Writer
- 1 AI Interview limit
With the Pro plan, you get all of the above, plus these extra features:
- Unlimited resume, cover letter, and resignation letter downloads
- Access to advanced AI features (Rezi Score, AI Keyword Targeting, Real-Time Analysis)
- AI Cover Letter Writer
- AI Resignation Letter Writer
- Full access to AI Interview
The Pro plan costs $29 a month, or you can make a one-time payment with the Lifetime plan, which comes with full access to all the features and will set you back $149. And between you and me, our CEO has been known to hand out Lifetime plans for free if you leave an honest review (good or bad) on Reddit.
Resume-Now
A major downside of Resume-Now is that there’s no free version or trial. So you can make your whole resume, get ready to download it, and boom — you’re hit with a paywall.
Here are the two payment plans if you want to download your resume:
14-Day Full Access: $1.85
Annual Access: $5.85/month (Billed annually at $70.20)
Both plans include the same benefits:
- Dozens of professional designs
- ATS-friendly templates
- Unlimited downloads
- Resume Check
Of course, it would be nice to have a free version that offers more basic features. That said, since the AI features are already limited, it makes sense that there aren’t more payment plans for the advanced features.
What People Say
While I’m pretty well-versed in reviewing resume platforms (I’ve tested dozens at this point), this is just my opinion. So, let’s see what customers have to say about both platforms — the good, the bad, and the on-the-fence.
Rezi
Rezi has a 4.6/5 rating on Trustpilot based on 224 reviews. You can also find a ton of honest reviews and feedback on the Rezi subreddit.
One of our recent users shared how Rezi made the job search process less stressful:

One customer praised how Rezi is well-suited for the modern-day job search:

And here’s a mixed review for good measure:

Resume-Now
Resume-Now has a 4.5/5 rating on Trustpilot from 16,000 reviews. But just a heads-up, if you do a quick Reddit search for the platform, there are many reviews calling the site out as a scam.
That said, let’s start with some positive reviews.
Many customers shared how easy it was to use the platform:

Take it over to Reddit, and just as many say the site lacks transparency over pricing:

My advice? Be clear on how much you’re paying and all the details surrounding cancellation before signing up with Resume-Now.
Final Thoughts: Rezi or Resume-Now?
Rezi is focused on optimization, keyword alignment, measurable scoring, and guiding you toward an ATS-compatible resume. It leans heavily into integrated AI tools and real-time feedback that tells you exactly how competitive your resume is.
Resume-Now feels more like a flexible writing and formatting platform with AI layered on top. You get more template variety and a step-by-step building experience that’s approachable for beginners. Its AI tools are helpful for inspiration, but they don’t dive as deeply into optimization or measurable impact.
Both can help you produce a strong application, but Rezi stands out for integrating AI tools that actually make a notable difference to your resume, rather than just adding synonyms or rewording sentences.
FAQ
Is Rezi AI good for resumes?
Yes, especially if your goal is optimization over aesthetics. Rezi’s AI is strong at generating achievement-focused bullet points, integrating keywords from job descriptions, and giving real-time scoring feedback. It pushes you to quantify impact and align with ATS systems.
Find out more: Is Rezi Worth It: An Honest Review
Is Resume-Now reputable?
Resume-Now is a legitimate resume builder with a large user base and a 4.5/5 rating on Trustpilot. It offers solid templates, formatting flexibility, and guided writing prompts. That said, it’s more of a traditional builder enhanced with AI rather than a deep optimization tool. It’s reputable in the sense that it delivers what it promises (resume and cover letter creation), but the depth depends more on the user than the platform itself.
Which AI is best for resumes?
“Best” depends on what you need. If you want ATS alignment, keyword targeting, and structured performance feedback, tools like Rezi stand out because they’re built around optimization. If you’re looking for writing inspiration, platforms like Resume-Now work well. The best AI is one that strengthens your achievements without replacing your voice. AI should enhance clarity and impact, not write something generic you could’ve copied from anyone.
Check out my top picks: Best AI Resume Builders
Do employers check resumes for AI?
Employers typically don’t run resumes through “AI detectors.” But what they do notice is generic, vague, or robotic language. If your resume sounds like it was generated in one click and never edited, that’s a red flag. The key is personalization. As long as your resume reflects your real achievements and sounds human, AI assistance usually isn’t a problem.
Lauren Bedford
Lauren Bedford is a seasoned writer with a track record of helping thousands of readers find practical solutions over the past five years. She's tackled a range of topics, always striving to simplify complex jargon. At Rezi, Lauren crafts genuine and actionable content that guides readers in creating standout resumes to land their dream jobs.

