How to Follow Up on a Job Application

When to reach out, what to say, and email templates that stay professional — not pushy.

Should You Follow Up After Applying?

Yes — in most cases. A well-timed, professional follow-up email after a job application serves three purposes: it demonstrates genuine interest, it keeps your name in front of the recruiter, and it gives you a chance to add anything that strengthens your application.

The caveat: the job posting must not say "no follow-up calls or emails." If it does, respect it — following up anyway signals you don't follow instructions, which is a red flag before you've had an interview.

For all other applications, a brief, professional follow-up sent at the right time is rarely unwelcome and often helpful. The LoopCV Follow-Up After Application Email Generator generates a professional follow-up email — standard, LinkedIn message, second follow-up, or sharing new information — in seconds. Free, no sign-up.

When to Follow Up

Timing matters. Follow up too soon and you seem impatient; follow up too late and the decision is already made.

Standard first follow-up: 7–10 business days after submitting your application. This gives enough time for the initial screening to happen while keeping your application fresh.

If a timeline was given: "We'll be in touch within two weeks" — wait until the end of that window before following up. Following up after a stated timeline means the message arrives when they're actively making decisions, not interrupting an earlier process.

Second follow-up: if you don't hear back after your first follow-up, wait another 5–7 business days before sending a brief second message. After a second non-response, it's time to move on — your application is either in process or has been rejected without notification.

After an interview: follow up within 24 hours with a thank-you email, not a standard follow-up. This is a different communication with a different purpose.

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How to Write a Follow-Up Email

A good follow-up email is short, professional, and specific. It should:
- Reference the exact role you applied for
- Express continued interest (not desperation)
- Add one new piece of value if possible (a relevant project, a thought about the company, a recent development)
- Make it easy to respond — a direct question or a clear close

Subject line: "Following up — [Job Title] Application" or "Re: [Job Title] — [Your Name]"

Email body (standard follow-up):
*"Dear [Name],

I wanted to follow up on my application for the [Job Title] role submitted on [date]. I remain very interested in the position and in [Company]'s work on [specific thing from your research].

Please let me know if there's any additional information I can provide. I'd welcome the opportunity to discuss my background further.

Kind regards,
[Your Name]"*

Keep it to 3–4 sentences. No long justifications, no restating your whole CV, no apologies for following up.

Following Up on LinkedIn

If you can't find a direct email address for the recruiter or hiring manager, LinkedIn is a legitimate and increasingly common channel for follow-ups.

Connect first, then message — or message directly if you have InMail credits. Your connection request note should be brief: "Hi [Name], I recently applied for the [role] at [Company] and wanted to introduce myself directly. Happy to connect."

After connecting: wait 24 hours, then send a brief message similar to your email follow-up. Keep it concise — LinkedIn messages should be even shorter than emails.

Don't be overly casual on LinkedIn. The informal nature of the platform can tempt you into a more casual tone than you'd use in email. Keep it professional — LinkedIn is still a professional channel for this purpose.

What If You Never Hear Back?

Many applications receive no response — this is an unfortunate reality of high-volume hiring. If you've followed up twice with no response after the stated timeline, the application has likely not progressed. Move on.

What "no response" usually means: application not progressed, or progressed but not selected. Rarely: your messages went to spam, or there's been an internal delay. The latter is possible but shouldn't stop you from continuing your search.

Don't personalise rejection or silence. High-volume applications often involve brief screening that has nothing to do with your quality as a candidate. A match percentage below a threshold, a last-minute internal candidate, a budget freeze — the reasons for non-response are usually not about you.

Keep applying. The most reliable way to counter low response rates is high application volume. LoopCV automates applications across 20+ job boards — so your search continues even when individual applications don't progress.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

How long should I wait to follow up on a job application?

7–10 business days after submitting your application, if no timeline was given. If the job posting specified a response window (e.g., "we'll be in touch within 2 weeks"), wait until that window has passed before following up.

Is it OK to follow up on a job application?

Yes — as long as the posting doesn't specifically say not to contact them. A brief, professional follow-up demonstrates genuine interest and can keep your application visible. Avoid calling HR teams directly; email or LinkedIn are the appropriate channels.

What do you say in a follow-up email for a job application?

Keep it short: confirm the role you applied for, express continued interest, and ask if they need anything additional from you. 3–4 sentences is ideal. Subject line: "Following up — [Job Title] Application." Don't apologise for following up, don't restate your whole application, and don't pressure them for a timeline.

How many times should you follow up on a job application?

Twice — maximum. A first follow-up at 7–10 business days, and a second follow-up 5–7 business days later if there's no response to the first. After two unanswered follow-ups, accept that the application hasn't progressed and focus your energy on other opportunities.

Should I follow up on a job application by phone?

Generally no, unless the job posting explicitly invites it or you have a specific contact's name and direct number. Cold calling HR departments without a specific contact is often unwelcome. Email or LinkedIn message is the standard and less intrusive approach.

What if I didn't get a confirmation email after applying?

Some companies' ATS systems don't send automatic confirmations. If you're not sure your application was received, check the portal (if applicable) or send a brief email to the listed contact: "I recently submitted my application for [Role] and wanted to confirm it was received. Please let me know if you need any additional information."

Is there a template for a follow-up email after a job application?

Yes — the LoopCV Follow-Up After Application Email Generator produces a professional follow-up email in seconds. Four templates: standard follow-up, LinkedIn message, second follow-up, and sharing new information. Subject line included. Free, no sign-up.

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