Built for engineers
who hate formatting resumes.
TeXume started as a personal tool. Like most engineers, I kept tweaking the same LaTeX file every time I applied for a job - adjusting bullet points, swapping projects, trying to match the job description. It was tedious. So I automated it.
The Problem
Jake's resume template is the gold standard in tech. Clean, ATS-safe, single-page. But LaTeX has a steep learning curve, and even experienced users spend more time fighting the toolchain than writing about their work.
On top of that, a good resume isn't one document - it's a different document for every job. Tailoring manually is slow and easy to get wrong.
What TeXume Does
TeXume gives you a clean form-based interface to fill in your details once. From that, it generates a properly typeset PDF using Jake's LaTeX template - no LaTeX knowledge required. If you prefer, you can use the DOCX engine instead and skip LaTeX entirely.
For Pro users, AI tailoring takes a job description and rewrites your bullet points and projects to match it in seconds. The project bank lets you store everything you've built; the AI picks the best fit for each role automatically.
Pricing Philosophy
A resume tool is usually something you need intensely for a short period, then not at all for years. Our pricing is designed to reflect that reality.
The Free plan gives you everything you need to build and export a standard resume. If you want the power of AI tailoring, you can buy a single credit exactly when you need it, or grab a monthly subscription while you're actively job hunting and cancel as soon as you land the role. No long-term lock-ins.
Credit
The resume template powering TeXume is Jake Gutierrez's open-source LaTeX template. It has been used by hundreds of thousands of engineers. TeXume would not exist without it.
Contact
Questions, feedback, or just want to say hello - hello@texume.com.