Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Why Your Cover Letter Signature Matters
- The 3 Parts of a Proper Cover Letter Sign-Off
- How to Sign a Printed Cover Letter (Hard Copy)
- How to Sign a Cover Letter You Upload Online (PDF / DOCX)
- How to Sign an Email Cover Letter
- Where Your Signature Goes (So It Looks “Correct” at a Glance)
- Best Closings to Use (and a Few to Avoid)
- Signature Examples You Can Copy
- Common Signing Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)
- Quick Checklist Before You Hit Send
- Real-World Experiences: What Actually Happens When You Sign Off (500+ Words)
You wrote a strong cover letter. You tailored it. You didn’t accidentally call the company by its competitor’s name
(a true horror story). Now you’re at the finish line: the signature.
Signing a cover letter sounds simpleuntil you’re staring at your screen wondering:
“Do I type my name? Add a handwritten signature? Paste a fancy e-signature? Do I include my phone number again?
Will I look like a grown-up professional or like I just discovered fonts yesterday?”
This guide walks you through exactly how to sign a cover letter for print, PDF upload,
and email, with clear examples you can copy and adapt. We’ll keep it polished, recruiter-friendly,
and free of anything that screams “I overthought this at 2:00 a.m.”
Why Your Cover Letter Signature Matters
Your signature is the final impressionlike the closing scene of a movie. It should feel confident and professional,
not abrupt or awkward. A clean sign-off signals attention to detail, business writing skills, and basic “I know how
professional letters work” energy (which, yes, counts).
The 3 Parts of a Proper Cover Letter Sign-Off
1) A professional closing (complimentary close)
Pick a closing that matches the tone of your letter and the company culture. In the U.S., the safest options are
classic and simple.
- Sincerely, (the timeless “little black dress” of closings)
- Best regards, (polished and friendly)
- Regards, (neutral and professional)
- Thank you, (great when you’ve already expressed enthusiasm)
- Respectfully, (best for formal settings)
Tip: Keep it short. Don’t end with something like “Warmest, most enthusiastic regards with a side of gratitude.”
Save the creativity for your portfolio.
2) Your signature (handwritten, electronic, or typed)
The format depends on how you’re sending the cover letter. If it’s printed, a handwritten signature is standard.
If it’s email, a typed name is usually all you need.
3) Your name (typed) and optional contact info
Your typed name should appear below your closing (and below the handwritten signature if you’re signing in ink).
In an email cover letter, it’s common to add phone number and email (and optionally LinkedIn/portfolio) under your name.
How to Sign a Printed Cover Letter (Hard Copy)
If you’re handing in a cover letter in person (rare, but not extinct) or mailing it (even rarer, but heysome industries
still love tradition), sign it like a standard business letter:
- Write a professional closing (like “Sincerely,”).
- Leave 3–4 lines of blank space.
- Sign your name in ink in that blank space.
- Type your full name below the signature.
Printed cover letter signature example
Use blue or black ink. Avoid neon gel pens unless you are applying to be a professional neon gel pen tester.
How to Sign a Cover Letter You Upload Online (PDF / DOCX)
Most applications today want you to upload a file. The goal here is to look professional without creating extra friction
for the hiring process.
Option A: Type your name only (simple and totally acceptable)
For many online submissions, a typed name is enough. It’s clean, ATS-friendly, and requires zero scanner drama.
Option B: Add a scanned handwritten signature (extra polish, optional)
If you want the “traditional letter” look in a PDF:
- Print the signature area (or sign on a blank white sheet).
- Sign neatly in dark ink.
- Scan or take a well-lit photo.
- Crop it tightly, keep the background clean, and insert it above your typed name.
Keep the signature image modest in size. This is a professional document, not a watermark audition.
Option C: Use an electronic signature (stylus/draw tool)
Many PDF tools let you “draw” a signature. This can look great if you use a stylus and keep it legible. If it ends up
looking like a cardiogram, choose Option A instead.
How to Sign an Email Cover Letter
If your cover letter is in the email body (or you’re sending a brief cover message), you generally do not
need a handwritten signature. Instead, use a professional closing, your typed name, and a clean contact block.
Email cover letter signature example (classic)
Email cover letter signature example (minimal)
Tip: If your email client already adds a signature, make sure it looks professional. A quote about “living, laughing,
and loving” is adorablejust not in a job application.
Where Your Signature Goes (So It Looks “Correct” at a Glance)
Your sign-off belongs at the end of the letter, after your closing paragraph. A strong closing usually:
- Reinforces your fit for the role
- Shows enthusiasm
- Signals interest in an interview or next step
- Thanks the reader
Then you sign off and add your signature format. Keep spacing consistent and readable.
Best Closings to Use (and a Few to Avoid)
Strong closings
- Sincerely, (safe in almost every situation)
- Best regards, (professional, slightly warm)
- Thank you, (works well when you’ve asked for the next step)
- Regards, (neutral)
Closings that can be risky
- Love, (save it for your grandma)
- Cheers, (can feel too casual depending on industry)
- Yours truly, (a little old-fashioned; not wrong, just vibes)
- Thanks a bunch, (friendly, but may read casual)
Signature Examples You Can Copy
1) Printed letter (handwritten signature)
2) PDF upload (typed name only)
3) PDF upload (insert signature image)
4) Email cover letter (full contact block)
5) Short, modern email cover message
Common Signing Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)
Mistake: Forgetting punctuation in the closing
Standard business formatting typically uses a comma after the closing (example: “Sincerely,”).
It’s small, but it reads “I know the rules.”
Mistake: Overstuffing the signature area
Your signature block isn’t a mini-resume. Keep it to the essentials. For email: name + phone + email is enough,
with optional LinkedIn/portfolio if relevant.
Mistake: Using a signature font that looks… theatrical
A signature should be readable. If your signature font looks like a pirate map, it’s not helping.
Mistake: Adding unnecessary extras
Avoid including your full mailing address again at the bottom, adding social media that isn’t professional, or stacking
credentials that aren’t relevant. The signature is the closing touchnot a data dump.
Quick Checklist Before You Hit Send
- Does the closing match the tone of the letter?
- Is the spacing consistent and easy to scan?
- If printed: did you leave blank lines and sign neatly in ink?
- If email: is your contact block clean and professional?
- Did you proofread your name (yes, really)?
Real-World Experiences: What Actually Happens When You Sign Off (500+ Words)
Here’s the part nobody tells you: signing a cover letter is rarely the thing that “gets you hired,” but it’s often
the thing that keeps you from looking sloppy. And in real recruiting workflows, “sloppy” is the silent assassin.
Hiring teams move fast, they skim, and they make tiny judgments in seconds.
One common job-search experience goes like this: you write a thoughtful letter, then you paste in a massive email
signature that includes five inspirational quotes, a headshot, a colorful logo, and a line that says “Sent from my iPhone.”
What happens next isn’t a dramatic rejection emailnothing happens. Your message just doesn’t look like the other polished
applications, and the reader mentally files it under “not detail-oriented.” A simple, professional sign-off would have
let your qualifications do the talking.
Another frequent scenario: a candidate wants to add a handwritten signature to a PDF, so they take a quick photo of
their signature on notebook papercomplete with shadow, coffee stain, and the faint outline of algebra homework beneath it.
The candidate’s intent is good (it shows care), but the execution looks messy. In practice, recruiters don’t award extra
points for “handwritten,” but they do notice when something looks unprofessional. If you’re going to insert a signature
image, it needs to be clean: white background, dark ink, and cropped tightly.
People also run into the “two-signatures” problem: they attach a cover letter PDF that ends with “Sincerely, Jordan Taylor,”
and then their email also ends with a second, unrelated signature block that uses a different name formatlike “J. Taylor”
or “Jordan T.” This creates a tiny moment of confusion (“Is this the same person?”). In real hiring pipelines, even small
confusion slows things down, and slow often means “move on to the next application.” Consistency is your friend. Use one
version of your name across your cover letter, resume, and email sign-off.
Then there’s the experience of applying through online portals that strip formatting. Candidates sometimes paste a full
cover letter into a textbox, only to see spacing collapse, bullets break, or special characters turn into weird symbols.
When that happens, the signature can drift away from the closing paragraph and look disconnected. The practical fix many
applicants learn: keep the sign-off ultra simple in text fieldsclosing, typed name, and maybe one contact lineso it stays
readable even if the system is allergic to formatting.
Finally, there’s the “I tried to be memorable” moment. Some applicants sign off with something like “Creatively yours,”
or “Excitedly,” because they want personality. In creative industries, a slightly warmer tone can workbut in many U.S.
hiring contexts, recruiters and HR teams prefer professionalism over novelty at the signature line. The safer move is to
show personality in your wording (what you’re excited about, why you’re a fit), and keep the closing clean. Think of the
signature as the frame around the painting. If the frame is loud, people stop looking at the art.
The takeaway from these real-world patterns is simple: your signature should reduce friction, not add it. A professional
closing, a consistent name, and the right format for print vs. email will make your application feel easy to trust. And
when you’re competing with dozens (or hundreds) of candidates, “easy to trust” is a powerful advantage.
