Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
32
down vote

favorite
9












From what I understand, it's uncommon to put full contact information of references on your resume.



In place of that do I need to put "References available upon request"?



Alternatively, is it safe to leave it out and leave that implicit? I'm afraid not mentioning it may make it seem like I have no references.







share|improve this question


























    up vote
    32
    down vote

    favorite
    9












    From what I understand, it's uncommon to put full contact information of references on your resume.



    In place of that do I need to put "References available upon request"?



    Alternatively, is it safe to leave it out and leave that implicit? I'm afraid not mentioning it may make it seem like I have no references.







    share|improve this question






















      up vote
      32
      down vote

      favorite
      9









      up vote
      32
      down vote

      favorite
      9






      9





      From what I understand, it's uncommon to put full contact information of references on your resume.



      In place of that do I need to put "References available upon request"?



      Alternatively, is it safe to leave it out and leave that implicit? I'm afraid not mentioning it may make it seem like I have no references.







      share|improve this question












      From what I understand, it's uncommon to put full contact information of references on your resume.



      In place of that do I need to put "References available upon request"?



      Alternatively, is it safe to leave it out and leave that implicit? I'm afraid not mentioning it may make it seem like I have no references.









      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jun 19 '13 at 22:33









      Irwin

      97631422




      97631422




















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          54
          down vote














          Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?




          In my years of experience as a US-based hiring manager, I always expect people to have references available when I ask for them.



          I don't need to see the references themselves on the resume. I don't need to see a phrase "References available upon request" on the resume.



          It's perfectly safe to leave them off. I would never assume that anyone has no references.



          Another reason for leaving them off of your resume is that you want to be in control of presenting your references. When asked to provide them, determine how many are necessary, and choose which references will best represent you for this particular position. Contact your references so they will expect a call or email from this company, and discuss the job with them so that they can represent you in the best possible light.



          Then give the list of references to the requester.



          In your locale, the norms may differ.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1




            Do you think this is country-specific?
            – Kevin
            Nov 21 '14 at 15:25






          • 1




            I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
            – Zikato
            Sep 9 '15 at 5:51






          • 2




            @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
            – dirkk
            Sep 9 '15 at 13:01










          • Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
            – fr13d
            Aug 20 '16 at 17:11

















          up vote
          17
          down vote













          Do not put on your resume, “References available upon request.” HR managers already know this and it’s a very overused phrase. Do not put the names and contact numbers of your professional references on your resume. You don’t want just anyone and everyone calling up your references every time they see your resume.



          You should be in control of your references and know who is going to call them and when. Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them. You’re the one looking for a job, so make sure that your references remain yours and out of the public domain.






          share|improve this answer



























            up vote
            3
            down vote













            Be wary of putting your references directly on your resume. Unscrupulous recruiters may strip this information from your resume without ever contacting you and use it to develop their own business.



            There is no need to mention your references on your resume, recruiters and hiring managers will ask you directly. It doesn't harm you to put "references available upon request," but it doesn't help you, and since a general rule of thumb is to keep your resume as brief as possible, why waste the space?






            share|improve this answer
















            • 1




              This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
              – David K
              Sep 9 '15 at 13:15










            • I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
              – komali_2
              Sep 9 '15 at 13:16










            • Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
              – David K
              Sep 9 '15 at 13:19

















            up vote
            2
            down vote













            This probably varies by region and culture, but here in the UK, you should leave out that statement.



            The normal assumption is that you have some referees - it's not something that needs to be stated. Stating it could make you look naive.






            share|improve this answer



















              protected by DarkCygnus Jul 13 at 20:38



              Thank you for your interest in this question.
              Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



              Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes








              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              54
              down vote














              Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?




              In my years of experience as a US-based hiring manager, I always expect people to have references available when I ask for them.



              I don't need to see the references themselves on the resume. I don't need to see a phrase "References available upon request" on the resume.



              It's perfectly safe to leave them off. I would never assume that anyone has no references.



              Another reason for leaving them off of your resume is that you want to be in control of presenting your references. When asked to provide them, determine how many are necessary, and choose which references will best represent you for this particular position. Contact your references so they will expect a call or email from this company, and discuss the job with them so that they can represent you in the best possible light.



              Then give the list of references to the requester.



              In your locale, the norms may differ.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1




                Do you think this is country-specific?
                – Kevin
                Nov 21 '14 at 15:25






              • 1




                I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
                – Zikato
                Sep 9 '15 at 5:51






              • 2




                @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
                – dirkk
                Sep 9 '15 at 13:01










              • Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
                – fr13d
                Aug 20 '16 at 17:11














              up vote
              54
              down vote














              Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?




              In my years of experience as a US-based hiring manager, I always expect people to have references available when I ask for them.



              I don't need to see the references themselves on the resume. I don't need to see a phrase "References available upon request" on the resume.



              It's perfectly safe to leave them off. I would never assume that anyone has no references.



              Another reason for leaving them off of your resume is that you want to be in control of presenting your references. When asked to provide them, determine how many are necessary, and choose which references will best represent you for this particular position. Contact your references so they will expect a call or email from this company, and discuss the job with them so that they can represent you in the best possible light.



              Then give the list of references to the requester.



              In your locale, the norms may differ.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1




                Do you think this is country-specific?
                – Kevin
                Nov 21 '14 at 15:25






              • 1




                I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
                – Zikato
                Sep 9 '15 at 5:51






              • 2




                @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
                – dirkk
                Sep 9 '15 at 13:01










              • Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
                – fr13d
                Aug 20 '16 at 17:11












              up vote
              54
              down vote










              up vote
              54
              down vote










              Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?




              In my years of experience as a US-based hiring manager, I always expect people to have references available when I ask for them.



              I don't need to see the references themselves on the resume. I don't need to see a phrase "References available upon request" on the resume.



              It's perfectly safe to leave them off. I would never assume that anyone has no references.



              Another reason for leaving them off of your resume is that you want to be in control of presenting your references. When asked to provide them, determine how many are necessary, and choose which references will best represent you for this particular position. Contact your references so they will expect a call or email from this company, and discuss the job with them so that they can represent you in the best possible light.



              Then give the list of references to the requester.



              In your locale, the norms may differ.






              share|improve this answer















              Do I have to put “References available upon Request” on my Resume?




              In my years of experience as a US-based hiring manager, I always expect people to have references available when I ask for them.



              I don't need to see the references themselves on the resume. I don't need to see a phrase "References available upon request" on the resume.



              It's perfectly safe to leave them off. I would never assume that anyone has no references.



              Another reason for leaving them off of your resume is that you want to be in control of presenting your references. When asked to provide them, determine how many are necessary, and choose which references will best represent you for this particular position. Contact your references so they will expect a call or email from this company, and discuss the job with them so that they can represent you in the best possible light.



              Then give the list of references to the requester.



              In your locale, the norms may differ.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Aug 20 '16 at 12:17

























              answered Jun 19 '13 at 22:41









              Joe Strazzere

              224k107661930




              224k107661930







              • 1




                Do you think this is country-specific?
                – Kevin
                Nov 21 '14 at 15:25






              • 1




                I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
                – Zikato
                Sep 9 '15 at 5:51






              • 2




                @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
                – dirkk
                Sep 9 '15 at 13:01










              • Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
                – fr13d
                Aug 20 '16 at 17:11












              • 1




                Do you think this is country-specific?
                – Kevin
                Nov 21 '14 at 15:25






              • 1




                I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
                – Zikato
                Sep 9 '15 at 5:51






              • 2




                @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
                – dirkk
                Sep 9 '15 at 13:01










              • Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
                – fr13d
                Aug 20 '16 at 17:11







              1




              1




              Do you think this is country-specific?
              – Kevin
              Nov 21 '14 at 15:25




              Do you think this is country-specific?
              – Kevin
              Nov 21 '14 at 15:25




              1




              1




              I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
              – Zikato
              Sep 9 '15 at 5:51




              I would says so, I worked in UK and after leaving my job there I asked if they give me reference and they said only type of reference they give is confirmation that I've worked here.
              – Zikato
              Sep 9 '15 at 5:51




              2




              2




              @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
              – dirkk
              Sep 9 '15 at 13:01




              @Ajax1995 Incredibly so. In Germany you get reference letters and rarely call or contact someone directly.
              – dirkk
              Sep 9 '15 at 13:01












              Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
              – fr13d
              Aug 20 '16 at 17:11




              Norms differ between locales. In my locale I have listed references for many years, as advised by recruitment agents. On the other hand, none of these references seem to have ever been contacted. I have recently begun omitting that section, in order to get (the local equivalent of) my résumé down to under 2 pages.
              – fr13d
              Aug 20 '16 at 17:11












              up vote
              17
              down vote













              Do not put on your resume, “References available upon request.” HR managers already know this and it’s a very overused phrase. Do not put the names and contact numbers of your professional references on your resume. You don’t want just anyone and everyone calling up your references every time they see your resume.



              You should be in control of your references and know who is going to call them and when. Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them. You’re the one looking for a job, so make sure that your references remain yours and out of the public domain.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                17
                down vote













                Do not put on your resume, “References available upon request.” HR managers already know this and it’s a very overused phrase. Do not put the names and contact numbers of your professional references on your resume. You don’t want just anyone and everyone calling up your references every time they see your resume.



                You should be in control of your references and know who is going to call them and when. Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them. You’re the one looking for a job, so make sure that your references remain yours and out of the public domain.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  17
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  17
                  down vote









                  Do not put on your resume, “References available upon request.” HR managers already know this and it’s a very overused phrase. Do not put the names and contact numbers of your professional references on your resume. You don’t want just anyone and everyone calling up your references every time they see your resume.



                  You should be in control of your references and know who is going to call them and when. Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them. You’re the one looking for a job, so make sure that your references remain yours and out of the public domain.






                  share|improve this answer












                  Do not put on your resume, “References available upon request.” HR managers already know this and it’s a very overused phrase. Do not put the names and contact numbers of your professional references on your resume. You don’t want just anyone and everyone calling up your references every time they see your resume.



                  You should be in control of your references and know who is going to call them and when. Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them. You’re the one looking for a job, so make sure that your references remain yours and out of the public domain.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jun 20 '13 at 7:15









                  Michael Grubey

                  4,20432252




                  4,20432252




















                      up vote
                      3
                      down vote













                      Be wary of putting your references directly on your resume. Unscrupulous recruiters may strip this information from your resume without ever contacting you and use it to develop their own business.



                      There is no need to mention your references on your resume, recruiters and hiring managers will ask you directly. It doesn't harm you to put "references available upon request," but it doesn't help you, and since a general rule of thumb is to keep your resume as brief as possible, why waste the space?






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 1




                        This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:15










                      • I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                        – komali_2
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:16










                      • Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:19














                      up vote
                      3
                      down vote













                      Be wary of putting your references directly on your resume. Unscrupulous recruiters may strip this information from your resume without ever contacting you and use it to develop their own business.



                      There is no need to mention your references on your resume, recruiters and hiring managers will ask you directly. It doesn't harm you to put "references available upon request," but it doesn't help you, and since a general rule of thumb is to keep your resume as brief as possible, why waste the space?






                      share|improve this answer
















                      • 1




                        This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:15










                      • I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                        – komali_2
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:16










                      • Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:19












                      up vote
                      3
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      3
                      down vote









                      Be wary of putting your references directly on your resume. Unscrupulous recruiters may strip this information from your resume without ever contacting you and use it to develop their own business.



                      There is no need to mention your references on your resume, recruiters and hiring managers will ask you directly. It doesn't harm you to put "references available upon request," but it doesn't help you, and since a general rule of thumb is to keep your resume as brief as possible, why waste the space?






                      share|improve this answer












                      Be wary of putting your references directly on your resume. Unscrupulous recruiters may strip this information from your resume without ever contacting you and use it to develop their own business.



                      There is no need to mention your references on your resume, recruiters and hiring managers will ask you directly. It doesn't harm you to put "references available upon request," but it doesn't help you, and since a general rule of thumb is to keep your resume as brief as possible, why waste the space?







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Sep 9 '15 at 12:46









                      komali_2

                      28217




                      28217







                      • 1




                        This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:15










                      • I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                        – komali_2
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:16










                      • Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:19












                      • 1




                        This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:15










                      • I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                        – komali_2
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:16










                      • Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                        – David K
                        Sep 9 '15 at 13:19







                      1




                      1




                      This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                      – David K
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:15




                      This answer adds nothing new to the previous answers. Please remember to not repeat others.
                      – David K
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:15












                      I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                      – komali_2
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:16




                      I do actively advise against putting your full references and the reason for this. Should that not count?
                      – komali_2
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:16












                      Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                      – David K
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:19




                      Both Joe's and Michael's answers advise against putting reference info on a resume, and Michael's answer specifically says that "Sometimes, recruiters and other companies will contact your references to recruit them."
                      – David K
                      Sep 9 '15 at 13:19










                      up vote
                      2
                      down vote













                      This probably varies by region and culture, but here in the UK, you should leave out that statement.



                      The normal assumption is that you have some referees - it's not something that needs to be stated. Stating it could make you look naive.






                      share|improve this answer
























                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        This probably varies by region and culture, but here in the UK, you should leave out that statement.



                        The normal assumption is that you have some referees - it's not something that needs to be stated. Stating it could make you look naive.






                        share|improve this answer






















                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote









                          This probably varies by region and culture, but here in the UK, you should leave out that statement.



                          The normal assumption is that you have some referees - it's not something that needs to be stated. Stating it could make you look naive.






                          share|improve this answer












                          This probably varies by region and culture, but here in the UK, you should leave out that statement.



                          The normal assumption is that you have some referees - it's not something that needs to be stated. Stating it could make you look naive.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered May 13 '15 at 17:35









                          A E

                          5,26611625




                          5,26611625















                              protected by DarkCygnus Jul 13 at 20:38



                              Thank you for your interest in this question.
                              Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                              Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?


                              Comments

                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Long meetings (6-7 hours a day): Being “babysat” by supervisor

                              Is the Concept of Multiple Fantasy Races Scientifically Flawed? [closed]

                              Confectionery