Should You Include References on Your CV? (2026 Best Practices)
The Modern Rule: Don't List References on Your CV
In 2026, the standard practice across virtually every market is to omit references entirely from your CV. Recruiters expect candidates to provide references later in the process — typically after a successful first interview, when both sides have decided to advance.
Listing names and contact details on your CV wastes precious space (you typically have 1 to 2 pages), violates your referees' privacy by exposing them to anyone who reads your document, and signals naivety about modern hiring practices.
The single exception: some academic and government applications still require references on the CV itself. Read the application instructions carefully — if references are explicitly requested as part of the initial submission, include them. Otherwise, leave them off.
Should You Write 'References Available Upon Request'?
The phrase 'References available upon request' was standard advice 20 years ago. In 2026, it's a near-universal signal that you're using outdated CV templates. Every recruiter assumes references are available — explicitly stating it adds noise without adding information.
The only scenario where this phrase still has a place: when you're filling space at the bottom of a one-page CV that would otherwise look unbalanced. Even then, a stronger ending would be a one-line tagline ('Open to remote opportunities across EMEA') or a relevant interest section.
Cut the phrase. If the rest of your CV is concise and impactful, the absence of any reference statement reads as professional, not negligent.
How Many References Do You Actually Need?
Most employers ask for two to three professional references when they decide to make an offer. Three is the safe default: enough to give the employer triangulation, not so many that the process drags.
References should include at least one direct manager from your most recent role (the person who can attest to current performance), and one peer or stakeholder who worked closely with you on a project. The third can be a former manager from an earlier role, a senior client, or a long-term mentor who knows your work over time.
Avoid family members, current colleagues at your level (peers fine, family no), and anyone who hasn't worked with you in the past 5 years. Stale references make the employer wonder who you've been alienating in your recent jobs.
How to Choose Strong References
A strong reference can speak in concrete terms about specific work you delivered, not vague generalities. The test: ask yourself what example projects this person would cite if asked 'tell me about working with [your name]'. If you draw a blank, they're not the right reference.
Seniority alone doesn't make a strong reference. A senior leader who barely knows your work is a weaker reference than a peer who managed a major project alongside you. Recruiters know this and will probe for specifics.
Diversity helps: pick references that show different sides of your work — one for technical depth, one for cross-functional collaboration, one for client-facing or leadership work. The composite picture is stronger than three references all describing the same competency.
How to Ask Someone to Be a Reference
Always ask before listing someone as a reference. Surprise calls from recruiters are awkward at best and damaging at worst — a referee caught off guard may give a noncommittal or distracted answer that hurts your candidacy.
The ask: 'I'm interviewing for [role/company]. Would you be willing to serve as a reference if they decide to call? They'll ask about [specific competencies]. The role would be a good fit because [1 sentence on the alignment].'
Confirm the best contact details (phone or email), the timeline (this week, next two weeks), and what context the recruiter is likely to bring up. A well-prepared reference call adds credibility; an unprepared one introduces doubt.
How to Brief Your References Before the Call
Once a recruiter has scheduled reference calls (usually after a final interview, sometimes after an offer), email your references with: the role title and company, a one-paragraph summary of why you're interested and why you're a fit, the specific competencies the recruiter will ask about, and any context that would help them speak to those competencies.
Example brief: 'I'm finalizing for the Head of Product role at [Company]. They're focused on whether I can scale a team from 5 to 15 over 18 months and own a $40M ARR product. Key examples to mention if relevant: the [Project A] launch and the [Team B] growth period. They're calling [day/time]. Thank you again for taking the time.'
Strong references appreciate this brief. It saves them effort, makes their answer more relevant, and increases the odds of a useful call.
What to Do If a Past Manager Won't Be a Strong Reference
Bad managers, layoff scenarios, or interpersonal conflicts can leave you without a credible reference from a recent role. This is more common than candidates assume — recruiters know it happens.
Options: substitute a peer or skip-level manager from the same role; lean on references from earlier roles where you have stronger relationships; if asked directly why a current manager isn't on the list, give a brief, neutral explanation ('My current manager is unaware I'm exploring; my prior manager from the same team can speak in detail about my work').
Never list a reference you suspect will be lukewarm or critical. A weak reference call sinks more candidacies than a missing reference. Quality over quantity.
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