# Email Writing Format: What Goes in Every Part

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication/email-writing-format/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication/email-writing-format.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving communication at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

Learn the professional email writing format step by step: subject line, greeting, body, closing, sign-off, and signature — what to put in each part.

## Key facts

- Title: Email Writing Format: What Goes in Every Part
- Category: Communication
- Primary skill: Communication
- Related skills: Professional Behaviors, Influence
- Primary keyword: email writing format
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication/email-writing-format/

## What this page covers

- Learn the professional email writing format step by step: subject line, greeting, body, closing, sign-off, and signature — what to put in each part.
- Practical guidance for email writing format
- How this topic connects to Communication

## Detailed explanation

The email writing format is more predictable than it looks: a clear subject line, a greeting, an opening line that states your purpose, a short body, a closing line with your request, a courteous sign-off, and a signature. Put those parts in that order and almost any work email reads as professional.

That predictability is the good news. If you have ever stared at a blank message wondering how formal to be or where to begin, the format isn't something you invent from scratch each time — it's a small, reusable structure you learn once and lean on for the rest of your career. Here is what belongs in each part, and the small choices inside each one that separate a passable email from a polished one.

## The email writing format, part by part

Top-ranking guides describe the same skeleton with minor variations — usually a five-part core (subject line, greeting, body, closing, signature) expanded to seven or eight once you split out the opening line and the closing request. Below is the full running order, from the top of the message to the moment before you hit send.

### 1. Subject line

The subject line is a short, specific summary of why you're writing, and it does the most work per word of anything in the email. Current formatting guides recommend keeping it to roughly 30 to 60 characters, or about six to ten words, and front-loading the important words — mobile inboxes cut off long lines, so the point has to survive truncation. Skip vague fillers like "Update," "Quick question," or "Follow-up"; they get low priority and quietly erode trust over time. Name the topic and any action instead: "Invoice #402 — approval needed by Friday."

### 2. Greeting (salutation)

The greeting sets the formality and shows you know who you're addressing. Match it to your relationship with the recipient: "Dear Ms. Rodriguez," or "Dear Dr. Thompson," for a first contact or a senior person, and "Hi Sam," or "Hello Priya," for a colleague you already know. When you genuinely can't tell how formal to be, lean formal — a slightly formal greeting that wasn't required costs you nothing, while an over-casual one where formality was expected can dent your credibility.

### 3. Opening line

Your first sentence should state why you're writing before you add any detail. A busy reader wants to know the purpose immediately, so lead with it: "I'm writing to confirm the details for Thursday's review," not a paragraph of throat-clearing. A brief courtesy is fine, but the main point comes first — that single habit does more for clarity than any other part of the format.

### 4. Body

The body carries your actual message, and its job is to respect the reader's time. Keep it to one or two short paragraphs — usually somewhere between 50 and 200 words — put the most important information first, and use white space, short paragraphs, and bullet points so it can be skimmed. Dense blocks of text are one of the top reasons emails go unread. Keep the presentation plain, too: a standard font like Arial, Calibri, or Times New Roman at 11 or 12 point, in black, with a blank line between paragraphs. The format gives you the container; filling it with a message that is genuinely [clear and brief](/knowledge/communication/concise-communication/) is the harder and more valuable half of the task — and if you want a quick read on that skill, you can [see where your communication stands](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) in a few minutes.

### 5. Closing line (your request)

Before you sign off, tell the reader exactly what happens next. Name the specific action and any deadline — "Could you approve the draft by Thursday?" — rather than trailing off and hoping they infer it. This is the line that earns a fast, useful reply, because the reader never has to guess what you actually need from them.

### 6. Sign-off

The sign-off is the short courtesy phrase that ends the message on a professional note. Safe, widely accepted choices are "Best regards," "Kind regards," "Sincerely," or "Respectfully," followed by a comma and then your name. Save relaxed sign-offs for people you already have an easy rapport with; when in doubt, one of the standard four never looks wrong.

### 7. Signature

Your signature block is your standing identity, so the reader never has to hunt for who you are or how to reach you. Include your full name, job title, company, and a way to contact you — a phone number and, where relevant, a professional profile link. Keep it clean and readable rather than crowding it with logos, quotes, and color; a tidy signature reinforces the same professionalism the rest of the format is building.

### 8. A final pass before you send

The last part of the format isn't visible in the email at all — it's the check you run before sending. Reread for typos and grammar slips, which undercut the credibility everything else just built, and choose your recipients deliberately: put only the people who need to act in the "To" field, use "Cc" for those who only need to stay informed, and think twice before hitting [reply-all](/knowledge/professional-behaviors/workplace-etiquette/). Adding people who don't need the message is one of the most common professionalism slips there is.

## The skills that make this feel automatic

You can memorize this format in an afternoon. What separates people whose emails consistently land well isn't that they know a longer list of parts — it's a handful of underlying habits that show up in every message they send.

**Communication** is the most direct of them. Leading with your main message, writing a concise and specific subject line, proofreading before you send, and choosing only the recipients who need the email — those aren't email-marketing tricks, they're the everyday professional-writing habits that the format is really a scaffold for. Get them right and the structure almost fills itself in.

**Professional Behaviors** covers the courtesy side of the format — the judgment calls, not the layout. Choosing the right level of formality for a greeting, matching your tone to the relationship, and closing politely are all signals of respect, and they're the unwritten conventions that make a message read as considerate rather than curt. This isn't about grand ideas of professionalism; it's the small, concrete choices inside a single message.

**Influence** is why format matters at all. A clear, well-ordered email — main point first, plain language, a specific ask — is simply easier to say yes to, so it reads as competent and gets a faster, more favorable response. You don't need persuasion tactics for this; a clean, direct message earns credibility on its own, which matters most when you're emailing a busy manager or someone senior. A short, free self-assessment can show which of these three habits are already yours and which are worth deliberate practice — the same **Work Skills Test** scores all twelve of the work skills these belong to, so you can [see which to strengthen first](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) and how email fits a bigger picture.

## What this means for you

You came here looking for the format, not just a template to paste — and that instinct to get the details right, rather than firing off whatever comes to mind, is already part of the skill itself. None of this is fixed talent, either; the parts of a clear email, and the habits underneath them, are learnable, and you can build them while still sounding entirely like yourself. As you take on more responsibility, the volume and the stakes of what you send by email only rise, so getting comfortable with this now pays off more, not less, over time. The natural next step is simply to find out where your own habits sit today.

## See where your work skills stand

The only thing left is to see where you actually stand. The **free** Work Skills Test is a quick self-assessment of your work skills — including the communication habits behind every email you send — that shows you where you're already strong and which skills would make the biggest difference to focus on next. It takes about seven minutes, and you finish with a clear picture of what to build first.

**Take the skills test**

*It's free, takes about seven minutes, and covers all twelve work skills.*

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

Learn the professional email writing format step by step: subject line, greeting, body, closing, sign-off, and signature — what to put in each part.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Communication. It also relates to Professional Behaviors, Influence.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/professional-behaviors.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/influence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

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## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
