How To Write A Letter In English
Whether you’re writing to a company, a teacher, a landlord, or a friend, this guide helps you sound clear, polite, and confidently human in English—without the “robot letter” vibe.
What You’ll Get
- A simple letter structure you can reuse for almost anything
- Natural-sounding opening lines (no awkward over-formality)
- A bank of polite phrases for requests, complaints, apologies, and thank-yous
- Copy-ready templates (formal + friendly)
- Common mistakes that quietly wreck tone (and how to fix them fast)
Table Of Contents
Choose The Right Letter Type
Before you write a single word, decide what kind of relationship you have with the reader. That choice controls your tone more than grammar does.
Formal
You don’t know them, or they’re in authority (company, school, government, hiring).
Style: Polite, clear, no slang, fewer contractions.
Semi-Formal
You know them a bit (coworker you don’t message daily, a professor you’ve met).
Style: Friendly-professional, short, direct.
Informal
Friends, family, close colleagues.
Style: Warm, personal, contractions are fine.
Most “letters” today are sent as email. That’s fine. The same structure works—you usually just skip the physical addresses and keep formatting simple.
The English Letter Format (Fast + Reusable)
Here’s what tends to work best for modern English letters: block format (everything left-aligned, blank line between sections). It looks clean and professional.
[Your Name] [Your Address] (optional in email) [City, State ZIP] (optional in email) [Email] | [Phone] (optional) [Date] [Recipient Name] [Title / Department] [Company / Organization] [Address] (optional in email) Dear [Name / Title], [Opening line: purpose of writing in 1 sentence.] [Paragraph 2: key details, context, dates, evidence, specifics.] [Paragraph 3: what you want next + polite closing line.] Sincerely, [Your Name]
Email version: Keep the salutation, body, and sign-off. Addresses can be removed unless required (applications, legal, or official paperwork).
Openings That Sound Natural
Your greeting sets the tone. Here are safe, natural options (with audio buttons if you want to practice how they sound out loud).
| Situation | Greeting | First Line Example |
|---|---|---|
| Formal (name known) | Dear Ms. Rivera, | I am writing to inquire about the status of my application. |
| Formal (name unknown) | Dear Hiring Manager, | I am writing to apply for the Marketing Assistant position. |
| Semi-Formal | Hello Dr. Chen, | I hope you’re doing well. I have a quick question about next week’s assignment. |
| Informal | Hi Maya, | Hope you’ve been well! I wanted to share some news. |
Language In Action
The Body: A Simple 3-Paragraph Formula
If you’re unsure what to write, use this. It works for requests, complaints, updates, and applications.
Purpose
State why you’re writing in one sentence.
Example: I am writing to request a copy of my transcript.
Details
Give the key facts: dates, order numbers, what happened, what you tried.
Example: I submitted my request on January 10 and have not received a confirmation.
Next Step
Say what you want and include a polite closing sentence.
Example: Could you please advise on the next steps? Thank you for your help.
Polite Request Phrases That Don’t Sound Weak
- Could you please confirm the appointment time?
- Would it be possible to reschedule to Thursday?
- I would appreciate it if you could send the updated invoice.
- Please let me know if any additional information is needed.
Complaint Tone (Firm, Not Rude)
The secret is: describe facts, explain impact, request a solution.
- On [date], I received…
- As a result, I was unable to…
- I would like to request a refund / replacement / correction.
Closings And Sign-Offs
Your sign-off should match your greeting. Here are options that feel natural in modern English.
| Level | Good Sign-Offs | When To Use |
|---|---|---|
| Formal | Sincerely, Respectfully, | Applications, official requests, business letters |
| Semi-Formal | Best regards, Kind regards, | Teachers, clients, coworkers you don’t joke with daily |
| Informal | Best, Thanks, Take care, | Friends, friendly colleagues, casual updates |
Copy-Ready Letter Templates
Copy, paste, then replace the brackets. Keep it short. Your reader will thank you (silently, but sincerely).
Subject: Request For [Document / Information] Dear [Name / Title], I am writing to request [exact item]. I would appreciate your assistance with this matter. For reference, [include key details: account number, student ID, dates, order number]. If there are any forms to complete or fees to pay, please let me know. Thank you for your time and assistance. Sincerely, [Your Name] [Phone / Email]
Subject: Issue With [Product / Service] On [Date] Dear [Name / Team], I am writing regarding an issue with [product/service]. On [date], I [briefly describe what happened]. As a result, [describe the impact: delay, extra cost, inconvenience]. I have attached [receipt / screenshots / reference number] for your review. I would like to request [refund / replacement / correction] by [reasonable date]. Please let me know the next steps. Sincerely, [Your Name] [Order / Reference Number]
Subject: Thank You Hello [Name], Thank you for your help with [specific thing]. I really appreciate you taking the time to [action they did]. Your support made it easier to [result]. Please let me know if I can return the favor. Kind regards, [Your Name]
Hi [Name], Hope you’ve been doing well! I’ve been [one sentence update], and it made me think of you. [Short paragraph with the main message: news, invitation, story, question.] Anyway, write back when you can—I’d love to hear what you’ve been up to. Best, [Your Name]
Want your letter to feel instantly more “native”? Keep sentences fairly simple, but make your request specific. Clarity reads as confidence in English.
Quick Wins
Common Mistakes
- Mixing greeting styles: “Hi respected sir” → choose one: “Hi Alex,” or “Dear Sir or Madam,”
- Being vague: “Please help me” → “Could you please reset my account password? My username is…”
- Over-apologizing: One “I’m sorry for the inconvenience” is enough.
- Long paragraphs: If a paragraph is more than 4–5 lines on mobile, split it.
- Wrong tone for complaints: Avoid insults and sarcasm. Facts + impact + request gets results.
- Ending without the next step: Always include what you want the reader to do next.
FAQ
Do I Still Need To Write Addresses In A Letter?
If it’s an email, usually no. For printed letters or official documents, including your contact info and the recipient’s details can still be expected.
What Should I Write If I Don’t Know The Person’s Name?
Use a role-based greeting: “Dear Hiring Manager,” “Dear Customer Support Team,” or “Dear Admissions Office,”. It’s clearer than guessing.
Is “To Whom It May Concern” Okay?
It’s not wrong, just old-fashioned. If you can name a team or role, that usually sounds more modern.
Sincerely vs. Best Regards: Which One Should I Use?
“Sincerely,” is safest for formal letters. “Best regards,” is great for semi-formal messages and ongoing professional relationships.
How Long Should An English Letter Be?
As short as you can make it while still being clear. For many situations, 120–200 words is plenty. Clarity beats length.
Should I Use Contractions In Formal Letters?
In very formal letters, many writers avoid contractions (“I am” instead of “I’m”). In semi-formal emails, contractions are normal and sound natural.





