Cover Letter Generator | Draft a Job Application Letter

Draft a cover letter from role details, company context, skills, and experience so you can personalize it before applying.

What the Cover Letter Generator Drafts

The cover letter generator creates a starting draft using the role, company, skills, and applicant background you provide. It is meant to be edited, not sent without review.

How to Make the Draft Stronger

Add the exact role title, company name, relevant achievements, and one or two reasons you fit the position. Specific inputs produce a more useful letter than generic skills alone.

Before You Send It

Read the letter aloud, remove exaggerated claims, check names and dates, and make sure the tone matches the job. A human edit is essential before submission.

About This Tool

Cover Letter Generator helps you write a professional cover letter by asking for the role, company, and key points you want to highlight, then producing a structured letter that follows standard business letter format.

When to Use It

Use this when applying for a job and you need a starting point for a cover letter, when the format and structure of a business letter is unfamiliar, or when you want to produce a draft quickly before customising it.

How to Use

  1. Enter the job title and company name.
  2. Add your key skills and relevant experience to highlight.
  3. Optionally enter the hiring manager's name for personalisation.
  4. Click Generate to produce the letter.
  5. Edit the output to add specific details before sending.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a cover letter be?

Three to four paragraphs fitting on a single page. Hiring managers spend very little time on cover letters so conciseness is important.

Should a cover letter repeat the resume?

No. The cover letter should complement the resume by explaining why your experience is relevant to this specific role and company, not just list what the resume already shows.

Do I need a cover letter if the job posting does not require one?

Submitting one when it is optional demonstrates initiative and gives you space to explain anything the resume cannot, such as a career change or employment gap.