ABSTRACT Mean motion resonances are important in the analysis and understanding of the dynamics of planetary systems. While perturbative approaches have been dominant in many previous studies, recent non-perturbative approaches have revealed novel properties in the low-eccentricity regime for interior mean motion resonances of Jupiter in the fundamental model of the circular planar restricted three-body model. Here, we extend the non-perturbative investigation to exterior mean motion resonances in the low-eccentricity regime (up to about 0.1) and for perturber mass in the range of ∼5 × 10−5 to 1 × 10−3 (in units of the central mass). Our results demonstrate that first-order exterior resonances have two branches at low eccentricity as well as low-eccentricity bridges connecting neighbouring first-order resonances. With increasing perturber mass, higher order resonances dissolve into chaos, whereas low-order resonances persist with larger widths in their radial extent but smaller azimuthal widths. For low-order resonances, we also detect secondary resonances arising from small-integer commensurabilities between resonant librations and the synodic frequency. These secondary resonances contribute significantly to generating the chaotic sea that typically occurs near mean motion resonances of higher mass perturbers.