Legal Counsel
Written by Mike Potter, CPRW, Author • Last updated on May 27, 2026

Legal Counsel CV Example

Achieving success with your legal counsel applications requires a strong, compelling CV that gives your skills and career achievements a chance to shine. Mentioning responsibilities from your previous experience, such as conducting legal research and reviewing agreements will indicate to the employer that you're a good fit for the role. In this article, we'll provide all the tips and advice you'll need to create a legal counsel CV that gives you the best chance to progress to the next stage of the recruitment process.

A stronger, more engaging legal counsel CV gives you the best chance of success. It can help you pass the ATS CV screening stage and impress the recruiter or hiring manager, increasing your prospects of reaching the interview stage. Let’s take a closer look at the key parts of a CV and how to develop them for maximum impact.

Your approach to creating your winning legal counsel CV will differ depending on your experience, your seniority and the details listed in the job description.

If you've got some relevant work experience, you'll want your CV to show the reader exactly how you've used your skills to good effect in the workplace up to now. Employers and recruiters will be drawn to your work experience for an indication of the impact you've had in previous roles. In this situation, you'll probably want to choose a reverse-chronological CV format, placing the most emphasis on your work experience. List your most relevant previous roles and provide evidence of the impact you made.

At the end of the day, though, a legal counsel CV is just a way to tell the story of how you’ve grown in your career. Regardless of your experience level, you want that progression to feel seamless and easy to follow for recruiters. To help you get there, we’re going to walk through each part of the CV step-by-step, starting with the basics in your header and working our way through to your professional achievements.

CV Header

Start your legal counsel CV by adding a professional-looking header that contains all your relevant contact information. Include your name, email address, phone number and location (your full address isn't typically necessary for UK job applications). If you have a LinkedIn profile, consider adding a URL to this in your header, to help the reader easily find more information on your career and credentials.

For UK jobs, it's generally not a good idea to add a photo or any other personal details beyond your basic contact information. This means leaving off details such as your age, gender, ethnicity and nationality, as these can introduce bias to the selection process and complications related to the Equality Act 2010.

Christian Morales
christian-morales@example.com
(111) 222 33 444 55
Manchester
linkedin․com/in/christian–morales–123

CV Summary

Underneath your contact information, write a brief CV summary or CV objective to introduce yourself and highlight a few key skills and qualities. This can help the employer to quickly form a first impression on your suitability for the legal counsel role. The CV objective provides an alternative to the standard CV summary. While the CV summary focuses on your skills and achievements through your work experience, a CV objective highlights your ambitions and plans for the future, including how the role fits with these. This makes it ideal for junior candidates.

In your summary or objective, write up to three sentences outlining your key skills, unique personal qualities and career achievements or ambitions, taking care to always reflect the requirements listed in the job description.

A good CV summary will highlight one or two key skills that match those listed in the job description, and show how you've put them to good use in your career to date. You'll want to set yourself apart from other candidates by focusing on unique qualities or particular areas of strength that have shaped your career to date. Below you'll find an example of a strong legal counsel CV summary.

Strong example:

Legal counsel with five years’ corporate law experience advising on multi-million-pound contracts. Holds a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) and maintained 95% success rate in litigation. Reduced negotiation cycles by 30%.

Unengaging example:

Experienced corporate legal counsel with a solid background in advising organisations on contractual matters and regulatory compliance, committed to providing reliable guidance and supporting business goals through effective legal strategies.

The legal counsel CV summary above gives you an idea of what to avoid. The differences are subtle, yet significant. Your summary could miss the mark if it's too generic and doesn't describe unique personal qualities and strengths. It might also be vague, use long, unstructured sentences, lack quantifiable evidence of your impact, or not be tailored to the job description.

Employment History

A CV's work experience section is usually its most important element. Employers will want to see how you've developed relevant skills in previous roles, and how you've put them to good use in successful projects and career achievements. Remember, it's essential to tailor this section to match the job description, including keywords and phrases to help employers see how you'll fit the role, and how you might put the required skills to good use in the future.

This section should contain a list of your most relevant previous jobs in the last 10 or 15 years. Add the job title, the name of the employer, its location and your dates of employment. Include detail in bullet points, outlining the skills you used in the role and the impact they made.

What differentiates an excellent work experience section from an average one is the use of action verbs and quantifiable evidence, showing how your actions led directly to positive results in previous roles. You'll also want to show how you've added relevant skills and increased your impact throughout your career progression. See below for an example of how to put the work experience section best practice into action:

Strong example:

Legal Counsel, January 2023 - Present
Hawthorne & Blake Solicitors, Manchester

  • Advised executive board on GDPR compliance, implementing new data protection policies and avoiding potential fines.
  • Resolved complex mergers and acquisitions disputes, leading due diligence reviews and securing favourable terms for £10 million transaction.
  • Implemented compliance training across five European offices, elevating legal awareness and reducing compliance incidents by 40%.

Unengaging example:

Legal Counsel, January 2023 - Present
Hawthorne & Blake Solicitors, Manchester

  • Provided general legal advice and guidance to internal teams on diverse matters across the organisation.
  • Drafted and reviewed contractual agreements and policies in line with standard practices and company procedures.
  • Collaborated with stakeholders to address legal queries and ensure compliance with applicable regulations and guidelines.

Above is an example of what not to do with your legal counsel CV. A less-effective work experience section could focus too much on irrelevant or out-of-date roles, or include generic information about your responsibilities that fails to show the impact you made. It might lack tailoring to the job description or fail to provide evidence to support the claims made in the bullet points.

Education and Qualifications

In your education section you'll want to list your highest and most recent qualifications, particularly if they're a requirement for the role.

A degree is typically a strict requirement for legal counsel jobs, and as such, you'll want to showcase yours in your CV. If you have a Bachelor of Laws or another similar, relevant degree that confirms your eligibility for the position, include it in your CV. You might also wish to add other degrees or qualifications that highlight your strongest skills, such as litigation strategy case management or regulatory compliance risk assessment.

Your education section should contain only the qualifications that you consider most relevant to the role. List them in reverse-chronological order, starting with the most recent and working back from there. For each entry, include the name and level of the degree or certification, the institution, its location and your graduation date or dates of study. To emphasise your qualifications and achievements, you might wish to include one or two bullet points, which highlight things like specialist areas of study, projects, dissertations or society memberships.

If the job description requires any specialist certifications or licences, you may wish to add these in your education section. If you add these, it's also a good idea to include the expiration date of the licence or qualification, if it has one.

Bachelor of Laws (LLB), 2018 - 2021
The University of Law, London

Skills

In your CV's skills section, you'll want to draw attention to some of your strongest skills that make you suitable for the role. Review the job description to get an idea of the most essential skills, and create a list of hard and soft skills, including some of your strongest, most unique qualities that set you apart from other candidates. For a legal counsel CV, it's essential to include relevant skills for the role that match your skill set, such as problem solving and corporate governance risk management, to impress the reader and show you're qualified for the legal counsel position.

Hard Skills

Hard skills are the specialist technical skills that are essential for carrying out the duties of the role. They might be developed through study, on-the-job training or experience in the industry, and some hard skills may require a licence or certification. For legal counsel roles, key hard skills you've gained, such as contract drafting negotiation skills, and regulatory compliance risk assessment, are typically among the most critical for the job. After checking the job description, include a list of four or five key hard skills in your CV to confirm that you have the necessary expertise for the role.

The ideal hard skills section will feature the most essential hard skills from the job description, while closely reflecting your own best technical abilities. The closer your strongest skills are to matching the job description, the higher your chances of success.

Review the examples below to understand which skills are often added to the hard skills section of a legal counsel CV.

  • Contract drafting negotiation skills
  • Corporate governance risk management
  • Regulatory compliance risk assessment

Soft Skills

Soft skills differ from hard skills because they tend to be more transferable and applicable to different roles. Soft skills are the personal strengths and qualities that define your style of working and determine how well you're likely to fit in with the team and wider organisation. Owing to the rapidly evolving nature of the work landscape, soft skills are growing in importance for a number of roles and industry sectors where technology is replacing hard skills. Additionally, soft skills are particularly valuable for junior and entry-level candidates, who might not have much work experience but have the right building blocks for a successful career.

Just like the hard skills section, begin by reviewing the job description to learn the most desirable soft skills to include in your legal counsel CV. Only add soft skills that you can provide evidence for throughout your CV. Aim to add up to five soft and transferable skills, including a mix of the most essential skills from the job description, together with some skills that make you stand out as a unique and compelling candidate.

The section below provides an overview of soft skills often highlighted in a legal counsel CV.

  • Negotiation
  • Communication
  • Critical thinking

Language Skills

Including a section on language skills can be beneficial, if you speak at least one language to a reasonable level of competency, in addition to your mother tongue. This is true even if language skills aren't a requirement for the role, as foreign language abilities often correlate to other valuable soft skills. Within this section, list the foreign languages you speak to a reasonable degree of competence, together with an indicator of your skill levels.

The methods for indicating your foreign language skills on your CV include assigning a basic descriptive word, such as:

  • English: Fluent
  • Spanish: Intermediate

You might wish to use an internationally recognised standard for your language skills, such as the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR). This divides your language skills into the following categories:

  • A1: Beginner
  • A2: Elementary
  • B1: Intermediate
  • B2: Upper intermediate
  • C1: Advanced
  • C2: Proficiency

Certifications and Licences

Depending on the role and your qualifications, it might be necessary to include a certifications section. It can enhance your chances of success to show specific training and certifications. Not only do these prove you're qualified for the role, but they also indicate proactivity and a dedication to professional development. Furthermore, if there are any necessary certifications or licences for the job, this CV section takes on even more importance. If you're applying for a technical role or a position that involves the use of specialist software or equipment, these might make it more necessary to include a section showcasing your training.

Take a look at this list of example certifications and licences for legal counsel candidates:

  • Diploma in Legal Practice, 2023
  • Postgraduate Diploma in Corporate Law, 2023
  • Advanced Contract Law Course, 2023

Expert Tip:

With recruiters scanning CVs in less than nine seconds, Barnet Council highlights the importance of a short and compelling personal summary. (1)

Additional Sections

Optional sections can be useful to add to your CV, to provide additional evidence that you have the skills for the legal counsel job. If you're unable to show you have all the necessary skills for the job through your work experience, optional sections can be a valid way of providing further evidence of your suitability, to give you the chance of gaining an interview. If you're an entry-level candidate or a career changer, optional sections can be particularly valuable.

Explore our career resources for practical strategies to make your CV stand out and move you closer to landing an interview.

Hobbies and Interests

Hobbies and interests are a legitimate way to showcase your skills, if you have any hobbies relevant to the role. In addition, hobbies and interests can showcase your personality, helping to differentiate you from other candidates. However, a hobbies and interests section is only valuable if it helps you to show relevant skills you've been unable to evidence in other parts of your CV. If your hobbies and interests are unrelated to the job, it's best to leave them off your CV.

Career Achievements

Compiling your key career achievements into a single list is an effective way of making your CV more readable at a glance. If you've won any awards or achieved any key milestones in your career to date, you might want to mention them here.

Volunteering

Another alternative to showcasing your skills and experience through work experience is by adding a volunteering section. This can give you a valuable showcase of your skills, particularly if you're a junior candidate or career changer without much relevant work experience. Structure your volunteering section the same as your work experience section.

Add your job title or the name of the volunteer role, the organisation, its location and the dates you volunteered. Also add some bullet points outlining your skills and experience in the role, as well as any key achievements.

Evidence-Based Insight:

9 out of 10 HR professionals want CVs to be tailored to the job description. (2)

Jobseeker
HR Insights

Including strong action verbs with your work experience bullet points can help you show the impact you made in previous roles. Starting each bullet point with an action verb is a great way to match your experience and achievements to the job description, giving the reader an easy way of identifying your key skills and seeing how you've applied them. Remember, it's essential to evidence any action verbs you add to your work experience. This will help show your achievements and the impact you made in previous roles. Use past tense for action verbs that describe previous roles, and present tense for your current position.

  • Analyse
  • Advise
  • Arbitrate
  • Draft
  • Litigate
  • Mediate
  • Negotiate
  • Research
  • Represent
  • Review

Now we've shown you everything that needs to go into your legal counsel CV, we can take a look at how it comes together in its final form in the following example:

Christian Morales
Strategic Legal Counsel Ensuring Compliance

Manchester

christian-morales@example.com

(111) 222 33 444 55

linkedin․com/in/christian–morales–123

Former Senior Legal Counsel with four years’ experience advising corporate clients on commercial contracts. Achieved 25% reduction in dispute resolution time through improved risk protocols. Bachelor of Laws ensuring compliance.

Employment

Legal counsel

2023

-

2026

Allen & Overy (London)

  • Negotiated multimillion-pound settlement mitigating £3m litigation risk for FTSE 100 client.
  • Drafted over 200 commercial agreements ensuring compliance with GDPR and UK data protection laws.
  • Implemented corporate governance framework enhancing board oversight and reducing regulatory breaches by 30%.
Education

Bachelor of Laws

2018

-

2021

University of Oxford (Oxford)

Skills
  • Contract drafting negotiation skills

  • Corporate governance risk management

  • Regulatory compliance risk assessment

Qualities
  • Negotiation

  • Communication

  • Critical thinking

Certificates
  • Diploma in Legal Practice

  • Postgraduate Diploma in Corporate Law

Languages
  • English - Native

  • French - Advanced

To get an idea of how your completed, one-page CV will look once its been fully designed, see our selection of CV examples.

Tips to follow

  • Keep it concise, aiming for a length of one side of A4 for junior candidates, or two for more experienced applicants (only go longer for senior, executive-level roles).
  • Tailor your CV to match the job description of the role you're applying for, highlighting your strongest skills and career achievements.
  • Use a reverse-chronological approach to listing your career timeline and education, starting with your most recent roles and courses, and working back from there.
  • Quantify your achievements by offering evidence that supports your claims throughout your CV wherever possible, such as key metrics, awards, and positive feedback.
  • Open your CV with an engaging CV summary or objective that concisely summarises your key skills and career achievements to date.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Don't try to impress with industry jargon or acronyms that can make your CV less readable, when simple, clear language will do the same job.
  • Don't add an inappropriate email address to your CV comrosing of nicknames or informal language. If needed, create a dedicated professional email address combining elements of your name, initials and/or profession.
  • Don't forget to review your contact information to make sure it's current, and update your LinkedIn profile with your latest career details.
  • Don't crowd your CV with unnecessary extra details, but stick to the key facts and present them in a clear, readable fashion.
  • Don't lie or exaggerate about previous jobs or your qualifications – it can backfire or even be considered fraud.

A well-written cover letter is an essential element of any job application. Take a look at our HR-approved cover letter templates to find a design and layout that matches your CV.

How to optimise your CV for ATS screening

Applicant tracking systems (ATS) are now commonly used by employers, to help them manage the recruitment process. One of the main functions of ATS software is the scanning and ranking of CVs according to their likely suitability for the role. By assuming this role in the recruitment process, ATS apps can reduce the amount of time employers need to spend reviewing CVs. With hundreds of applications for a single vacancy becoming increasingly commonplace, this increased efficiency is extremely valuable for employers.

The increasing usage of ATS apps by recruiters and employers means it's critical to adapt and prepare your applications to successfully navigate this stage of the selection process. Following the tips below will give you everything you need for an ATS-compatible CV:

  • Include keywords and phrases from the job description that are easy for ATS apps to identify, and help make you appear a strong fit for the role.
  • Use clear headings that reflect standard CV conventions, such as 'work experience', 'education' and 'skills'.
  • Choose a standard CV layout, avoiding special design elements such as text boxes, columns or unlabelled graphics that can confound ATS scanning apps.
  • Select a font that can enhance the readability of your CV, such as popular serif and sans serif fonts, with size 10 to 12 for body text and 14 to 16 for headings.
  • Use bullet points in place of full sentences and paragraphs. This can reduce the overall length of the document, make the keywords stand out and make it easier for ATS apps to scan.

It might seem like there's a lot to remember when it comes to making an ATS-compatible CV, but taking care with this stage can really improve your chances of success. To make the process as easy as possible, use one of our expert-designed, ATS-optimised CV templates and boost your chances of success.

If you want to impress recruiters with your CV, use Jobseeker's ready-made CV templates, which are HR-approved for maximum chances of success.

To make a strong first impression on hiring managers, tailor your CV for every application, adding keywords and phrases that match the job description. Select a suitable CV format for your experience level, and show the reader how you've used skills relevant to the role, to create a positive impact in your career to date.

Finally, enhancing the look and feel of your CV using one of Jobseeker's HR-approved CV templates can help leave a lasting impression on the reader, and boost your chances of success with your job applications.

References:

  1. Barnet Council (UK local government), Recruitment tips: How to write a supporting statement
  2. Jobseeker, HR Insights
Share via:
Author
Mike Potter is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and an experienced copywriter specialising in careers and professional development. He uses extensive knowledge of workplace culture to create insightful and actionable articles on CV writing and career pathways.

Impress employers with your CV

Step-by-step guidance to create a professional CV in minutes.

Read more