Resume keywords & skills for a Financial Analyst
A financial analyst resume's keywords revolve around the model–forecast–decision-support chain: financial modeling, forecasting, budgeting, variance analysis, valuation, FP&A, P&L analysis, cash flow analysis, and scenario analysis. On tools, Excel (advanced functions / VBA) is all but a hard skill, plus SQL, Power BI / Tableau, and SAP / Oracle / Hyperion. Paste your resume below to see which of this role's keywords you hit and miss — comparison only, nothing uploaded. Keywords align your analysis skills to the role; they aren't filler.
Financial Analyst resume keywords (29)
Hard skills
Tools & tech
Soft skills
Check your resume against these Financial Analyst keywords
Paste your resume (or drop a file) and see which of this role's keywords you already have and which you're missing — entirely in your browser, nothing uploaded.
Keywords are relevance, not a trick
Financial analyst roles test Excel and modeling fast: list 'financial modeling' and an interview may have you talk through how you'd build a three-statement model. List only the analyses and models you genuinely built, with business context — more convincing than a term pile.
Frequently asked questions
Don't just write 'proficient in Excel' — it's nearly assumed. Tie it to concrete ability: pivot tables, advanced functions (INDEX/MATCH, SUMIFS), VBA automation, three-statement modeling. Add a use ('built a rolling 12-month cash flow forecast model') so a recruiter sees your real level.
Accounting leans toward recording and compliance: general ledger, reconciliation, month-end close, GAAP. Financial analysis (especially FP&A) leans toward forward-looking decision support: modeling, forecasting, budgeting, variance and scenario analysis. Pick keywords for your real work — don't stack both sets.
Write honestly what you did (reporting, variance analysis, budget support) and don't claim complex modeling — an interview asking about modeling detail exposes it. A workable move: show modeling skill via a real small project (even personal or coursework), then build FP&A experience over time.
No. Keywords raise relevance, but financial analyst hiring ultimately turns on your real modeling, analysis, and business judgment. PolishCat helps align wording and spot gaps — it doesn't sell a 'guaranteed pass' line.
Updated · PolishCat team