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In UX writing, your cover letter is your first UX artifact. It shows whether you can be clear, concise, and user-centered under tight constraints.
Your resume lists what you did. Your cover letter explains why your accomplishments and experience matter for their specific problem, using the language of their job description.
It also helps hiring managers connect the dots between your case studies and their actual product needs. That’s important when your background is non-traditional, like moving from copywriting, technical writing, or content marketing.
One more thing people overlook: UX teams often care about design sensibilities. A clean, readable cover letter that respects white space and logical flow quietly signals you understand the look and feel of good product content.
If you’re still building the fundamentals, I’d make sure your materials reflect the core expectations in UX writing skills before you obsess over wording.
A strong UX writer’s cover letter has a predictable structure. You are not trying to be “unique” here, you are trying to be easy to evaluate.

Keep it consistent with your application package. That means the same styling choices as your resume, the same font family, and a similar header layout.
Include your email, phone, and digital profiles. I like listing LinkedIn and an online portfolio right under my name so it’s impossible to miss.
If you can find a name, use it. It signals effort and personalization, and it makes your letter feel like it’s written to a human.
If you cannot find the hiring manager, “Hi Hiring Team” is a solid default. “To whom it may concern” usually reads like you gave up before you started.
A fast way to find a name is to check the company’s LinkedIn page, search for a recruiter, or look up the product design leadership team. If the job posting includes a recruiter signature, use that.
Your opening should do two jobs in two sentences. It should name the role and connect you to something real in the job advert, like onboarding flows, error messages, or content strategy ownership.
Avoid vague openings like “I’m passionate about UX.” If you want to sound like a UX writer, start like a UX writer: specific, contextual, and focused on users.
I like two body paragraphs:
If you want to ground this in portfolio reality, you can reference a case study in the middle of the paragraph, not as an afterthought. Something like: “In my password reset rewrite case study, I…” then link your portfolio.
If you need models for how to write case studies that are skimmable, these UX writer portfolio examples are a good reference.
Close with a direct, friendly ask. A polite closing is usually one sentence that thanks them and one sentence that invites the next step.
Then sign off cleanly. “Best,” or “Sincerely,” is fine. Do not overthink this part.
This is the section that separates a good cover letter from a generic one. A tailored cover letter makes the reader feel like you are already thinking like an internal teammate.
Start by doing 10 minutes of company research. You do not need a deep dive, you need a few anchor points that help you write in their language.
Here’s what I look for when I customize:
That’s it. Three anchors is enough to write a cover letter that feels personal without sounding like fan mail.
Now, how do you weave those anchors in without sounding forced? Use the job posting as your vocabulary list. If they say “information architecture,” mirror it. If they say “content design,” use that term. If they emphasize accessibility, include one sentence about how you write for accessibility standards.
Then add a tiny proof of effort. Mention one UX detail you noticed, like how they handle error messages or confirmations. You’re demonstrating that you can read interface language the way a UX writer should.
Also, do not forget the basics. A customized greeting is the easiest personalization win, and it takes two minutes if you use LinkedIn intelligently.
Most candidates list skills. Strong candidates show skills in a UX design project.
Instead of saying “I’m good at microcopy,” say what you wrote and why it mattered. Mention button labels, labels, menus, onboarding flows, error messages, and confirmation dialogs, but tie them to user behavior or a measurable outcome.
Hiring managers also want to see how you think with constraints. That could be design constraints, technical constraints, brand constraints, or legal constraints. UX writing is rarely done in a perfect sandbox.
I like to structure this section of a cover letter using a simple mini story:
If you are early in your career, you can still do this with a spec project. The key is to make it user-centric and transparent. “This was a self-directed redesign” is completely acceptable if your writing process is clear and the case study shows real reasoning.
You can also borrow language from design interview questions and turn it into cover letter proof. For example: “I explored two label options, tested them in a quick usability session, and iterated based on user feedback.” That reads like a UX writer, not a generic applicant.
If you need a clean path for building these projects fast, I explain a portfolio-first approach in how to become a UX writer, and you can reuse the same case studies for both the letter and interviews.
Below are two examples and a template. Use them as structure, not as a script.
Hi [Hiring Manager Name],
I’m applying for the UX Writer role at [Company]. I noticed your product leans into clear, direct language in onboarding, especially around [Specific Step], and that’s the kind of UX writing work I love doing.
In my current role at [Company], I write microcopy across signup and account flows, including button labels, helper text, and error messages. I collaborate closely with UX designers in Figma and partner with product managers and engineers to make sure our UI text ships accurately and stays consistent with our editorial guidelines.
One project that maps well to your needs was a rewrite of our verification step. I reorganized helper text, clarified labels, and rewrote error messages to be more specific and less blamey. After launch, we saw fewer drop-offs at that step and a decrease in related support tickets.
I’d love to bring that same user-centered approach to [Company], especially for flows like [Flow Mentioned In Job Posting]. My portfolio is here: [Portfolio Link], and I’m happy to walk through one case study during an interview.
Best,
[Your Name]
Hi [Hiring Team],
I’m applying for the UX Writer position at [Company] because your focus on [Company Value] shows up in the interface itself, not just on the careers page. The product voice feels consistent and calm, even in moments like errors and confirmations.
I’m a UX writer who has shipped UI text across onboarding flows, confirmation dialogs, and empty states. I work cross-functionally with UX/UI designers, user researchers, and front-end developers, and I’m used to iterating based on usability testing and real user feedback.
In my last project, I led a content audit for a new feature area and standardized naming conventions across the UI. That reduced inconsistencies, improved readability, and made it easier for the team to scale new screens without inventing new terminology every sprint.
Here’s my online portfolio: [Portfolio Link]. Here’s my LinkedIn: [LinkedIn Link]. Thank you for your time, and I hope we can talk.
Sincerely,
[Your Name]
Hi [Name or Hiring Team],
I’m applying for the UX Writer role at [Company]. I’m interested because [Specific reason tied to product, mission, or job posting].
In my work at [Company or Project], I write [Types of UI content] and collaborate with [Teams]. I’m strongest in [Two role-relevant skills], and I validate decisions using [Research or testing method].
A relevant example is [Project]. I [What you did], which led to [Outcome]. The problem you’re solving in [Job Posting Theme] is similar, and I’d love to contribute.
My portfolio is here: [Link]. Thank you for your time, and I’d welcome the chance to discuss how I can help [Company].
Best,
[Your Name]
If you want your cover letter to be taken seriously, editing is not optional. UX writers are judged on precision, and a typo reads like a product bug.
Here’s how to proofread your cover letter effectively:
Writing a UX writer cover letter is more than just a formality; it’s your first chance to showcase your skills as a UX professional. By demonstrating clarity, user focus, and relevance to the role, your cover letter becomes a strong argument for why you’re the right fit.
Remember, hiring managers are looking for writers who can solve problems, collaborate effectively, and think critically about user needs. Use your cover letter to connect your experience to their challenges, reference your portfolio strategically, and highlight measurable outcomes when possible.
Approach your cover letter like a UX artifact: concise, purposeful, and tailored to your audience. With the right structure and personalization, it can be the key to unlocking your next opportunity.
Here, I answer the most frequently asked questions about UX writer cover letters.
Not always, but it can be a competitive advantage. If the job posting asks for one, I treat it like a required deliverable and use it to make my case studies feel tailored to their product.
One page max, but I prefer shorter. Three to five short paragraphs usually beats a dense wall of text.
Use a spec project and be honest about it. Show your writing process, include screenshots in your portfolio, and explain how you gathered feedback, even if it was informal.
Yes, if the role is embedded in product design. Mention it naturally as part of collaboration, not as a buzzword list.
They describe themselves instead of describing outcomes. Hiring managers want to know what problem you solved, how you solved it, and how you think about users.
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