Formal Letter Writing —
A Complete, Practical Guide
Learn exactly how to write a formal letter in English — with real examples, step-by-step format, and the kind of tips no textbook ever tells you.
Let me be honest with you. Most people learn formal letter writing by memorising a template — and then completely freeze the moment the actual situation is a little different.
That is not how it should work. A letter is just a conversation — just written on paper, with some rules. Once you understand those rules (not just memorise them), writing any formal letter becomes easy.
In this guide, you will learn the format, the language, the common mistakes, and you will see real example letters. By the end, you won't need to look up a template ever again.
Students writing school applications, job seekers writing cover letters, employees writing complaint or leave letters, or anyone who needs to write something professional in English.
1. What Is a Formal Letter — And Why Does It Matter?
A formal letter is a written message sent to someone you do not know personally — or to someone in an official position. This could be your school principal, a company manager, a government office, or a bank.
The difference between a formal and an informal letter is simple:
Written to friends or family. Casual tone. No fixed format. You can write freely.
Written to officials or strangers. Professional tone. Fixed structure. Every word matters.
Formal letters are important because they create a written record. If you complain verbally, it can be ignored. If you write it formally, it must be responded to. That is the power of a formal letter.
In school exams, job applications, government offices, banks — formal letter writing comes up again and again. If you are building your English communication skills overall, you might also want to read our guide on Basic English Grammar Fully Explained — it covers the grammar rules that help your letters sound natural and correct.
2. The Complete Format — Part by Part
Here is the golden rule: Every formal letter has 7 parts. Learn these 7 parts and you can write any formal letter.
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Your Address (Sender's Address)
Write your own address at the top-right corner. This tells the reader where to send the reply. Do NOT write your name here — only your address.
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Date
Write the date below your address on the right side. Use a clear format:
25th April 2025orApril 25, 2025. Never write just numbers like 25/04/25 in formal letters. -
Receiver's Address (Inside Address)
Write the name, designation, and address of the person you are writing to — on the LEFT side. Example:
The Principal, Government High School, Delhi. -
Subject Line
One single line explaining why you are writing. Keep it short and specific. Example:
Subject: Request for Leave of Absence. This helps the reader understand the letter immediately. -
Salutation (Greeting)
Start with
Dear Sir/Madam,orDear Mr./Ms. [Last Name],if you know their name. Never write "Hey" or "Hello" in a formal letter. -
Body of the Letter
This is the main content. Split it into 3 paragraphs: Opening (why you are writing), Middle (the full explanation or request), and Closing (what you expect next / a polite ending).
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Complimentary Close + Signature
End with
Yours sincerely,(if you know the name) orYours faithfully,(if you don't). Then write your full name below it.
Yours sincerely = you know the person's name (you wrote "Dear Mr. Sharma")
Yours faithfully = you don't know the name (you wrote "Dear Sir/Madam")
This small detail is tested in exams — remember it!
3. The Right Language and Tone
The format is important — but the language is what makes or breaks a formal letter. You can have the perfect format and still fail if your language sounds casual, rude, or confusing.
✍️ Use Formal Vocabulary
Swap your everyday words for formal alternatives:
I want to tell you...
Can I get...
I'm writing because...
ASAP / soon
Thanks a lot
I wish to inform you...
I would like to request...
I am writing to...
At the earliest convenience
I am grateful / I sincerely thank you
📏 Keep Sentences Short and Clear
One mistake many students make is writing very long, tangled sentences because they think it "sounds more formal." It doesn't. Short and clear is better. If your sentence needs more than two commas, break it into two sentences.
Good grammar is the backbone of any formal letter. If you want to make sure your grammar is solid before writing, check out our page on Verbs Complete Guide and Prepositions Complete Guide — these two topics cause the most grammar errors in formal letters.
🤝 Be Respectful, Not Servile
Formal does not mean begging. You are asking or informing, not pleading. Avoid phrases like "I humbly beg you" — they sound outdated. Instead, write clearly and confidently: "I would appreciate your consideration of this matter."
4. Common Types of Formal Letters
There are many types, but these are the ones you will need most often — in school, work, or daily life:
Written to a principal or manager requesting time off due to illness, family event, or personal reasons.
Written to report a problem — about a product, service, or a situation — and request a solution.
Written to apply for a job. Introduces who you are and why you're the right person for the role.
Written when you want information about something — a course, product, service, or admission process.
Written to formally ask for something — a permission, a document, a meeting, or a favour.
Written to a newspaper to express your opinion on a social issue. Very common in school exams.
5. Full Letter Examples — Read, Understand, Apply
Example 1 — Leave Application to Principal
Sender's Address
45, Rajiv Nagar
Lucknow – 226001
Uttar Pradesh
Date
25th April 2025
Receiver's Address
The Principal
Delhi Public School
Lucknow – 226003
Subject: Application for Leave of Absence – 28th to 30th April 2025
Dear Ma'am,
I am writing to respectfully request a leave of three days — from 28th April to 30th April 2025 — as I am suffering from a viral fever and have been advised rest by our family doctor. I am currently in Class 10 (Section B), Roll Number 22.
I will ensure that I complete all missed classwork and assignments upon my return. I am attaching the medical certificate from Dr. Sharma for your reference.
I would be grateful if you could kindly grant me the requested leave. Thank you for your understanding.
Yours sincerely,
Aarav Mehta
✔ Clear subject line with exact dates | ✔ Reason explained simply | ✔ Offered to make up for missed work | ✔ Mentioned supporting document | ✔ Professional closing
Example 2 — Complaint Letter to a Company
Sender's Address
12, MG Road
Bangalore – 560001
Karnataka
Date
25th April 2025
Receiver's Address
The Customer Service Manager
QuickShop Electronics Ltd.
Mumbai – 400001
Subject: Complaint Regarding Defective Laptop – Order No. QSE-78921
Dear Sir/Madam,
I am writing to bring to your attention a serious issue with a laptop I purchased from your website on 10th April 2025 (Order No. QSE-78921). Within three days of delivery, the screen began displaying random lines and the laptop would shut down unexpectedly.
I contacted your helpline on 15th April, but the issue remains unresolved as of today. The product is still under warranty, and I am entitled to either a replacement or a full refund as per your stated return policy.
I request that this matter be addressed within 7 working days. I am attaching photographs of the defect and my purchase receipt for your records.
I trust that your company will resolve this promptly. Please contact me at the address above or at aarav.m@email.com.
Yours faithfully,
Aarav Mehta
✔ Specific order number cited | ✔ Timeline of events clearly mentioned | ✔ Specific resolution requested (replacement/refund) | ✔ Deadline set politely but firmly | ✔ Evidence mentioned (photos + receipt)
Example 3 — Letter to the Editor
45, Sector 12
Chandigarh – 160012
25th April 2025
The Editor
The Tribune
Chandigarh
Subject: Growing Menace of Plastic Waste in Public Parks
Dear Sir/Madam,
Through the columns of your esteemed newspaper, I wish to draw public attention to the alarming accumulation of plastic waste in Sector 7 Park, Chandigarh. Despite dustbins being placed at regular intervals, visitors continue to litter freely, and the local municipal authority has failed to take any corrective action.
This not only destroys the beauty of our public spaces but also poses a serious health risk to the neighbourhood. I urge the concerned authorities to increase the frequency of cleaning, impose fines for littering, and run community awareness campaigns.
I hope your newspaper will give this matter the attention it deserves.
Yours faithfully,
A Concerned Citizen
6. Dos and Don'ts of Formal Letter Writing
These are the things that actually separate a good formal letter from a bad one. Read them carefully.
- Use a clear, specific subject line
- State your purpose in the very first paragraph
- Use paragraph breaks — one idea per paragraph
- Proofread for spelling and grammar before sending
- Mention any attached documents in the body
- Write the date in full (25th April 2025)
- Keep the tone polite but direct
- Sign with your full name
- Use contractions (don't, I'm, we've)
- Use slang or informal words
- Use abbreviations like ASAP, FYI, etc.
- Write your name at the top (it goes at the bottom)
- Leave the subject line blank
- Use exclamation marks (!!!) excessively
- Write in ALL CAPS for emphasis
- Make the letter unnecessarily long
7. The 5 Most Common Mistakes Students Make
Mistake 1 — Writing the Name at the Top
Many students write their name at the top of the address block. In a formal letter, you write only your address at the top. Your name goes at the very bottom, after the closing line.
Mistake 2 — Vague Subject Lines
Writing Subject: Letter or Subject: Request tells the reader nothing.
Be specific: Subject: Application for Sick Leave – 28th to 30th April 2025.
A good subject line can alone decide whether your letter gets read first.
Mistake 3 — Using "Yours truly" incorrectly
"Yours truly" is an informal or American English closing — not standard for formal academic or professional letters in Indian English contexts. Stick to Yours sincerely or Yours faithfully.
Mistake 4 — Forgetting to State the Purpose Early
Don't make the reader search for why you are writing. Your very first sentence should make it clear: "I am writing to request..." or "I am writing to bring to your attention..."
In CBSE and state board exams, marks are specifically given for: format (sender address, date, receiver address, subject, salutation, closing), language (formal tone), and content (relevance and completeness). Losing marks on format is the easiest mistake to avoid — just memorise the 7 parts.
Mistake 5 — Mixing Formal and Informal Language
This is the most common. Students start formally — "I am writing to inform you..." — and then somewhere in the middle slip into "...so please help me ASAP." Stay consistent throughout. Once you're in formal mode, stay there.
If you find that your overall English sentence construction is the problem, our guide on Narration — Direct and Indirect Speech will help you understand how reported language works — very useful for formal writing.
8. How to Actually Get Better at Formal Letter Writing
Reading examples is the first step. But to really improve, you need to write — not just read.
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Pick a situation and write from scratch
Choose a scenario: you are absent from school, you want to complain about noisy construction near your house, you want to apply for an internship. Write the full letter without looking at any template.
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Check it against the 7-part format
Go through each of the 7 parts one by one. Is your sender's address right? Is the subject line specific? Are you using Sincerely or Faithfully correctly?
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Read it aloud
If it sounds awkward when you read it aloud, it will read awkwardly on paper too. Fix those sentences until it flows naturally — but still sounds formal.
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Expand your vocabulary
The more formal words you know, the easier it becomes. Try our list of 50 Essential Words You'll Never Forget and 100 Daily English Phrases Every Student Must Know.
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Write at least 3 different types
A leave application, a complaint letter, and a letter to the editor. These three types cover the majority of what you'll ever need — in exams and in real life.
And if you want to build your overall English communication — not just writing but also speaking — we have a complete guide on How to Improve Your English Speaking at Home that works alongside your writing practice beautifully.
Quick Summary — Everything on One Page
Sender's address → Date → Receiver's address → Subject → Salutation → Body (3 paragraphs) → Closing + Signature
Know the name → "Yours sincerely" | Don't know the name → "Yours faithfully"
No contractions, no slang, no abbreviations. Short sentences. One idea per paragraph.
Write your purpose in the FIRST sentence. The reader should not have to search for why you wrote.
Keep Growing Your English 🚀
Formal letters are just one skill. Explore more guides on Wordify English:
