How to End a Cover Letter

The closing paragraph is the easiest part to get right and the most commonly overdone. Here's what a strong close does, what to write, and the phrases that undermine an otherwise good letter right at the end.

What the closing paragraph needs to do

The final paragraph of a cover letter has one job: make the next step clear and easy, then stop.

It does not need to summarise the letter. It does not need to thank the hiring manager for their time. It does not need to express enthusiasm for the role again. All of those things either add nothing or actively weaken the ending.

What it needs to say, in roughly two sentences:
1. You'd welcome a conversation about the role.
2. Where to reach you (or a reference to your attached CV for contact details).

That's it. A closing paragraph that does this clearly and confidently in 30 to 50 words is the right length. If yours is longer, you're probably repeating something from earlier in the letter or adding padding.

The closing formula that works

Here is the structure of a strong cover letter close:

Sentence 1 — The invitation: "I would welcome the opportunity to discuss [the role / how my experience with X applies to what you're building / this further]."

Keep it confident and specific where possible. "I would welcome the opportunity to discuss how my three years building the compliance function at [company] maps to what you're doing here" is better than "I would welcome the opportunity to discuss this further" — but both are fine.

Sentence 2 — The contact reference: "My contact details are on the attached CV, and I'm available at your convenience." Or: "I'm available for a call at any time — please find my contact details on the attached CV."

Sign-off: "Yours sincerely" (if addressed to a named person), "Yours faithfully" (if addressed to "Dear Hiring Manager" — UK convention), or "Kind regards" / "Best regards" (works everywhere, increasingly standard in professional contexts).

Your name: Your full name below the sign-off.

That is the entire close. Two sentences, a sign-off, your name. If you've written more than that, look for what can be removed.

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Phrases to cut from your closing paragraph

These are the closing phrases that consistently weaken good cover letters:

"Thank you so much for taking the time to read my application." You're thanking them for doing their job. It positions you as subordinate and adds nothing.

"I look forward to hearing from you." Weak and passive. You're hoping for an outcome rather than making it easy for them to act. Replace with a direct invitation.

"I hope you will consider my application." Worst of all. You're begging for consideration in your final sentence. This is the last impression you leave.

"I am available for interview on..." followed by a list of your available times. You're solving a problem they haven't raised. Let them contact you and schedule from there.

"Please don't hesitate to contact me." Filler. Of course they can contact you; you've applied for a job.

"References available on request." They know. Don't write it.

"I am confident that I would be a great asset to your team." After a strong middle section, this is redundant. They can draw their own conclusion. Stating it for them sounds defensive.

Any sentence in your closing paragraph that doesn't either invite a conversation or make contact easy can be cut.

Closing examples for different situations

Standard professional role:
"I would welcome the opportunity to discuss how my experience with [X] contributes to what you're building. My contact details are on the attached CV and I'm available at your convenience. Kind regards, [Name]."

When you have a specific follow-up in mind:
"I'd love to walk you through the specific work I've done on [relevant project] in more detail — I think the approach we took maps directly to what you're trying to do here. Please do reach out at any time. Kind regards, [Name]."

For a casual or startup environment:
"Would love to talk through this more — details on the CV. Thanks for reading. [Name]."

When responding to a referral:
"[Referrer's name] suggested I get in touch, and having read more about what you're doing, I'd love to have a conversation. I'm available at your convenience. Kind regards, [Name]."

Notice what all of these have in common: they're short, they make the next step easy, and they stop without apologising, summarising, or hoping. The tone varies by context; the structure doesn't.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

How do you end a cover letter?

With a brief closing paragraph (30–50 words) that invites a conversation and refers the reader to your contact details on the attached CV. Then a professional sign-off (Kind regards / Yours sincerely) and your full name. Nothing else is needed — no thanks for reading, no lists of your availability, no hope that they'll consider your application.

What is the best sign-off for a cover letter?

"Kind regards" and "Best regards" are the most widely used and work in every professional context. "Yours sincerely" is traditional and appropriate when you've addressed the letter to a named person. "Yours faithfully" is used when you've written "Dear Hiring Manager" — mainly a UK convention. All are correct. Avoid "Cheers," "Thanks," or leaving no sign-off at all.

Should you say "thank you" at the end of a cover letter?

Not with "thank you so much for taking the time to read my application" — that positions you as subordinate and wastes words. A brief professional acknowledgment is fine if it's genuine, but the strong close invites a conversation rather than thanks the reader for doing their job.

What should you not say at the end of a cover letter?

Avoid: "I hope you will consider my application," "I look forward to hearing from you," "please don't hesitate to contact me," listing your interview availability, "references available on request," and any re-summary of the letter. These all either add nothing or weaken the ending.

How do you ask for an interview in a cover letter closing?

Don't ask for an interview — invite a conversation. "I would welcome the opportunity to discuss this further" or "I'd love to talk through how my experience with [X] maps to what you're building" is a confident invitation that doesn't sound like you're begging for a favour.

Should the closing paragraph be on a separate page?

No. A cover letter is one page. If your closing paragraph is ending up on a second page, your letter is too long — tighten the middle section until everything fits on one page at a readable font size.

Does how you end a cover letter actually matter?

The opening matters most, but a weak close undermines a strong letter. "I hope you will consider my application" after three excellent paragraphs leaves a different final impression than a confident, brief invitation. The close is the last thing the reader sees before they decide whether to open your CV.

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