How to List Mining Certifications on Your Resume

Certifications and documents

Mining recruiters scan for certifications first. They need to quickly verify you have the mandatory tickets before reading anything else. Get this section wrong, and your resume goes straight to the reject pile.

Here's exactly how to format your certifications for maximum impact.

Where to Place Certifications

Your certifications should appear on page one, typically after your contact details and summary statement. Don't bury them at the end — recruiters won't search for them.

📌 Recommended Resume Order
  1. Contact Details
  2. Professional Summary (3-4 lines)
  3. Licences & Certifications
  4. Equipment Operated
  5. Employment History
  6. Education

The Correct Format

Use a clear, scannable format with consistent structure:

LICENCES & CERTIFICATIONS

HR Licence (Heavy Rigid) ........................ Current to March 2028
Standard 11 (WA Resources Induction) ............ Current
Working at Heights (RIIWHS204E) ................. Exp. June 2027
Confined Space Entry (RIIWHS202E) ............... Exp. June 2027
First Aid HLTAID011 / CPR HLTAID009 ............. Exp. September 2026
White Card (General Construction Induction) ..... Current
Forklift LF (TLILIC003) ......................... Current to 2029
EWP - Boom <11m (TLILIC010) .................... Current

What to Include

Always Include:

Include If Relevant:

Don't Include:

Expiry Dates Matter

Always include expiry dates. Recruiters need to know your tickets will be current when you start.

💡 Pro Tip

If a certification expires within 3 months of your application, add "(Renewal scheduled)" to show you're on top of it. Better yet, renew before applying.

Unit Codes: When to Use Them

Including the official unit code helps ATS systems match your certifications exactly:

Format as: "Working at Heights (RIIWHS204E)" to capture both search terms.

State-Specific Certifications

Some tickets are state-specific. Make sure you have the right ones for where you're applying:

Western Australia

  • Standard 11 (Resources Safety Induction)
  • WA Mining Supervisor's Certificate (if applicable)

Queensland

  • Coal Board Medical (Queensland Coal)
  • Generic Induction (GIQ)
  • Standard 11 (for metalliferous mines)

New South Wales

  • NSW Mining Induction
  • MDG25 (mechanical maintenance)

Common Certification Mistakes

  1. Listing "tickets" without specifics — "Various mining tickets" tells recruiters nothing
  2. Missing expiry dates — Creates doubt about currency
  3. Wrong section header — Use "Licences & Certifications" not "Qualifications" (which implies degrees)
  4. Including training without certification — Attending a course isn't the same as being certified

Not Sure If Your Certifications Are Listed Correctly?

Our free resume audit checks your certification formatting against what recruiters actually look for.

Free Resume Audit