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How to Write an HGV Driver CV That Gets Interviews

9 May 20262 min readGS Driver TrainingUpdated: 9 May 2026
How to Write an HGV Driver CV That Gets Interviews

An HGV driver CV needs to do one thing above all else: demonstrate to a hiring manager that you are a compliant, experienced, and reliable driver in the shortest possible time. Most logistics recruiters spend fewer than 30 seconds on an initial CV review. A well-structured, clearly formatted CV that leads with your licence categories, CPC status, and relevant experience will consistently outperform a longer, more detailed document that buries the key information.

The Structure of an Effective HGV Driver CV

1. Personal Statement (3–4 Lines)

A brief, factual summary of your experience, licence categories, and what you are looking for. Avoid generic phrases like "hardworking team player" — they add no information. Instead, lead with specifics: "Class 1 (C+E) driver with 8 years' experience in temperature-controlled distribution. Full CPC, ADR Class 2 and 3, clean licence. Seeking a tramping or multi-drop role in the South East."

2. Licences and Qualifications

This section should appear immediately after your personal statement — before your work history. Include: driving licence categories (C, C+E, D1, D), Driver CPC status and renewal date, D4 medical date, specialist qualifications (ADR classes, HIAB, tanker endorsement), and digital tachograph card number.

3. Work History

List your most recent role first. For each role, include the employer name, job title, dates of employment, and a brief description of your responsibilities. Focus on specifics: vehicle types driven, sectors covered, typical routes, and any additional responsibilities such as vehicle checks, load security, or customer liaison.

What to IncludeWhat to Avoid
Vehicle types and weights drivenGeneric phrases like "responsible for driving"
Sectors (retail, construction, temperature-controlled)Unexplained employment gaps
Typical routes (regional, national, international)Irrelevant personal information
Any additional responsibilitiesSpelling and grammar errors

Common CV Mistakes to Avoid

MistakeWhy It Matters
No licence categories listed on the first pageRecruiter cannot assess suitability without scrolling
Expired or unspecified CPC statusRaises immediate compliance concerns
Unexplained employment gapsSuggests unreliability or undisclosed issues
Generic personal statementFails to differentiate from other candidates
No mention of vehicle types drivenCannot assess experience level

Tailoring Your CV for Different Roles

A single generic CV is less effective than a tailored one. For multi-drop roles, emphasise customer service, time management, and knowledge of delivery procedures. For tramping or long-distance work, emphasise your ability to manage extended periods away from home and your tachograph management experience. For specialist roles (ADR, tanker, HIAB), lead with your specialist qualifications and relevant experience.

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