An architecture covering letter should support the CV and portfolio, not repeat them. Keep it short, specific and useful. The reader should understand the role you want, why this practice makes sense and where the evidence sits in your application.
1. Write for the actual role
Before writing, read the advert properly. Pull out the role level, project types, software, responsibilities and any practical requirements. Then choose two or three points where your evidence genuinely matches.
2. Open clearly
Start with the role you are applying for and one specific reason it interests you. Avoid long life stories. A hiring manager should know within the first few lines why you have contacted them.
3. Use evidence, not adjectives
Do not rely on phrases such as passionate, hardworking or creative without proof. Show the project, task, software, responsibility or outcome that backs up the claim.
- Weak: I am passionate about sustainable design.
- Better: My Part II project explored retrofit strategies for a mixed-use urban site, with a focus on reuse, daylight and material life cycle.
- Weak: I am confident in Revit.
- Better: In practice, I used Revit to support planning drawings, model updates and sheet production across a residential project.
4. Keep it short
For most applications, one concise email or around 250 to 350 words is enough. If the covering letter is doing more work than the CV and portfolio, something is off.
5. Explain the portfolio link
Use the covering letter to tell the reader what to look for. Mention two or three relevant portfolio examples and why they matter for the role.
6. Include practical details
Location, availability, notice period and right to work can save time. You do not need to over-explain, but if the details are relevant, include them cleanly.
7. End with a simple CTA
Finish by saying you would welcome a conversation or would be happy to provide further information. Do not sound desperate, and do not make the reader work out what happens next.
Common mistakes
- Sending the same generic letter to every practice.
- Repeating the CV line by line.
- Using architect when you are not ARB-registered.
- Writing too formally when a normal human tone would be clearer.
- Forgetting to attach or link the portfolio properly.
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s recruiter view is that a covering letter is a signpost. It should point the reader to the strongest evidence and make the application feel deliberate.
Next step
Use these tips with the architecture cover letter templates, then tighten your architecture CV before applying.
Watch: language that helps applications stand out
This related Architecture Social episode is a good fit because small language choices can make an application clearer and more memorable.
Listen: related Architecture Social podcast
The podcast goes deeper into how wording, tone and specificity can help job applications land better.
You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.



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