How to Write a Cover Letter for an Internal Position

An internal application has advantages — you know the company, the culture, the people. It also has specific risks: familiarity can lead to assumptions, and those assumptions can undermine your application before it's read properly.

Why internal cover letters are different

When you apply internally, you have context most external candidates don't: you know the organisation, you understand the culture, and in many cases you know the hiring manager. These are genuine advantages. But they create a specific failure mode: candidates who assume the letter is a formality.

Hiring managers consistently report that internal candidates are among the weakest at cover letters. Because they know the company, they write cover letters that assume too much — skipping the "why here" entirely, writing shorter letters that lack evidence, or focusing on the political dimension of the move rather than the professional case.

An internal cover letter still needs to make the case for why you — not the other candidates, internal or external — are the right person for this role. The familiarity is background context. The professional evidence is still the point.

What to include and what to skip

Skip:
- Company overview or background (they know you know the company)
- Generic enthusiasm for the organisation ("I am passionate about [Company]'s mission...")
- An explanation of your current role that they already know well

Include:
- A clear statement of which role you're applying for and from which team or position
- Why this specific role is the right next step — for the company, not just for you
- Evidence of what you've already delivered internally that demonstrates you're ready for this level
- Any relevant experience or skills that might not be obvious from your internal profile — project work, external training, qualifications, or work done outside your core role
- One or two specific outcomes from your current role that directly demonstrate your readiness

The internal cover letter is denser with internal evidence and lighter on company context. It reads differently from an external letter — but it should still be focused, specific, and professional.

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How to reference existing relationships appropriately

One of the trickiest elements of an internal application is navigating your existing relationships with the people involved in the hiring decision.

If you know the hiring manager: Don't write as if you're continuing a conversation you've already had. The cover letter is a formal document that may be read by HR and others who don't know you. Write it with the same professionalism as if it were going to a stranger — while acknowledging the existing relationship briefly if it's relevant.

If you've already discussed the role informally: It's fine to reference this — "Following our conversation last month about the Head of Product role..." — but then make the formal case as if that conversation didn't guarantee anything. It probably didn't.

If someone internally endorsed you or suggested you apply: Mention it briefly at the top ("At [Manager's Name]'s suggestion, I'm formally applying for...") and then make your own case. Don't rely on the endorsement to carry the letter.

The rule: be warm and direct where the relationship warrants it, but write a letter that could stand alone if every person who reads it didn't know you.

Making the case for progression

Internal cover letters are usually applications for progression — a step up in level, scope, or responsibility. How you make that case matters.

Focus on what the company gains, not what you want. "I'm ready for more responsibility and I've been in this role for three years" is about you. "The work I've done on [specific project] over the past 18 months has prepared me to take on [specific aspect of the new role], and here's what that would mean for [specific business outcome]" is about them.

Use internal evidence specifically. You have access to a type of evidence no external candidate has: internal metrics, project outcomes, relationships built, and institutional knowledge. A specific outcome from an internal project — quantified and framed in terms of its impact on the business — is often more compelling than external credentials.

Don't over-explain the political context. "I feel I've been overlooked for progression and this role would give me the visibility I need" is never appropriate in a cover letter. Frame everything in professional, evidence-based terms.

Close with a forward-looking statement. What would you bring to this role that would move things forward? A brief, confident forward-looking sentence ("I'd relish the opportunity to bring the same commercial focus to a broader portfolio") ends the letter on the right note.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

How do you write a cover letter for an internal job posting?

Apply the same structure as any cover letter — why this role, why you, what next — but use internal evidence rather than company background. Skip the company overview (they know you know it). Focus on your internal track record, specific outcomes you've delivered, and why this role is the right next step for the business. Don't assume the familiarity means the letter is a formality.

Should I mention existing relationships in my internal cover letter?

You can acknowledge them briefly — "At [Name]'s suggestion, I'm formally applying for..." — but then make your case as if the letter could stand alone. The hiring process may involve HR and people who don't know you personally. Write for the full audience, not just the person you know.

Is an internal cover letter easier to write than an external one?

Different, not easier. You have more relevant evidence to draw on. But familiarity creates the specific risk of writing a letter that assumes too much — skipping key justifications because you think the hiring manager already knows. Internal candidates are consistently among the weakest at cover letters for this reason.

What should an internal job application cover letter say?

Which role you're applying for and from which current position. Why this role is the right next step in terms of what the company gains. Specific internal outcomes that demonstrate your readiness. Any relevant skills or experience not obvious from your internal profile. A brief, forward-looking close.

Should I tell my current manager I'm applying for an internal job before I submit the application?

This is a judgment call that depends on your relationship and culture. In many organisations, internal moves require manager sign-off or at least notification. Applying for an internal role without your manager's knowledge — and having them find out through the hiring process — is a risk. In most cases, having the conversation first is the right move, even if it's uncomfortable.

How long should an internal cover letter be?

250–350 words — slightly shorter than a standard external letter because you can skip the company background. Three focused paragraphs: why this role now, the specific internal evidence for your readiness, and a brief confident close.

Can I use the LoopCV cover letter generator for an internal application?

The generator produces a strong professional structure that you can adapt for an internal application. The main adaptation needed is replacing generic company context with internal evidence and outcomes — which the generator's structure makes easy to drop in.

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