Rezi vs JobJam: Resume Builder or Per-Job Tailoring?
Rezi is a resume builder. You craft one strong master resume inside its editor with its templates and AI writing, on a monthly or yearly subscription. JobJam tailors your existing resume to each job description, at three levels, and gives you a new ATS score per version, on one-time credits that never expire. If you're building a resume from scratch, Rezi is good at that. If you already have a resume and you're applying to many roles, JobJam is built for that.
Two different jobs
The reason "Rezi vs JobJam" is a confusing comparison is that the two tools are not really solving the same problem. They overlap enough to look like competitors, but they sit at different points in your job search.
Rezi is where you build the resume. You start in its editor, pick a template, and its AI helps you write bullet points and fill out sections. The output is one polished document you're proud to send. It's oriented to crafting a single strong master resume rather than spinning up a new version per application.
JobJam assumes you already have that resume. It takes what you have, reads a specific job description, and rewrites your resume to fit that role, then scores the result against an ATS-style check so you can see the gain before you apply. The unit of work is the application, not the document.
Where Rezi is the right call
It's worth being clear about this, because Rezi does its job well. If you're starting from a blank page, switching careers, or your current resume is genuinely a mess, a builder is the better starting point. Rezi's templates are clean and ATS-friendly, and its AI writing gets you from "I don't know how to phrase this" to a usable draft quickly.
If your search is mostly about having one excellent resume that you'll send to a handful of carefully chosen roles, a builder covers that. You don't need per-application tailoring if you're applying to five jobs that are all basically the same.
Where JobJam fits instead
The case for JobJam shows up once you're applying at volume and the roles aren't identical. A backend role at one company and a platform role at another both want "your resume," but they're testing for different things, and a single master resume undersells you on at least one of them.
JobJam rewrites your full resume for each job description at three levels. Conservative makes small targeted tweaks. Moderate rewrites the sections where you're undersold. Aggressive fully realigns the resume for the role. Each version gets its own ATS-style fit score, so you can see which one actually moves the needle for that specific posting before you hit submit. It works from your real experience rather than inventing qualifications.
On top of that, JobJam generates AI cover letters from your actual background plus the job description, and includes an application tracker. The tracker is a kanban board that stores the exact resume version you sent and the fit score at the time you applied, so three weeks later when a recruiter calls, you know precisely what they read. Rezi doesn't include a tracker.
Side by side
| Rezi | JobJam | |
|---|---|---|
| Core purpose | Resume builder with AI writing | Per-job resume tailoring and scoring |
| Best for | Building one strong master resume | Applying to many roles at volume |
| Templates and editor | Yes, a real strength | Works from your existing resume |
| Per-JD tailoring | Light, oriented to one master resume | Three levels, new ATS score per version |
| ATS-style fit score | Yes | Yes, per version, before you apply |
| AI cover letters | Yes | Yes, from your experience plus the JD |
| Application tracker | No | Yes, kanban with resume version and score |
| Pricing model | Subscription, around $30/month or $150/year | One-time credits, never expire |
| Free tier | Limited to one resume | 3 evaluations, 3 optimizations, 3 cover letters, 30 AI assists |
The pricing difference
This is the other place the two part ways. Rezi is a subscription, around $30/month or $150/year. That's fine if you'll use it heavily for a month and cancel cleanly. The problem is that most people don't cancel on time, the renewal hits, and they pay for months after the search is over.
JobJam is one-time credits. The tiers are Starter at €7.99, Job Seeker at €14.99, and Active Hunter at €34.99, with top-ups at €4.99, €11.99, and €24.99 if you run low. Credits never expire and there's no auto-renewal. A typical three-month search costs $90 to $150 on a subscription tool. JobJam's popular tier is €14.99 once, regardless of whether your search wraps in three weeks or drags on for nine months.
You can also try it before paying anything. The free tier includes 3 evaluations, 3 optimizations, 3 cover letters, and 30 AI assists, and there's a public demo at /try-it with no account required.
Which one to pick
Pick Rezi if your main need is building a resume from scratch and you want a polished editor and templates to do it in. It's good at that specific job.
Pick JobJam if you already have a resume and you're running a real search: applying to many roles, tailoring per application, scoring each version, generating cover letters, and tracking what's working, without signing up for another subscription. If you want to dig into the mechanics, the ATS score guide covers the scoring side, and the four-way comparison puts both tools next to Jobscan and Teal.
JobJam uses a one-time credit model. No subscription, no auto-renewal. See pricing