Email drafting

Work emails, formatted fast.

Free, public, no login, and built for drafts you can send after review.

1

Input Method

2

Email Details

Review your draft before sending.
§

Professional Email Formatting

A well-formatted email communicates professionalism before a single word is read. Structure, spacing, and tone combine to create the reader's first impression and determine whether your message gets a response.

Email Structure

Subject Line

Specific, under 50 characters. Include action verb and deadline if applicable.

[Action Required] Q3 Budget Approval by Friday
Greeting

Match the formality level. Formal: Dear [Name]. Business: Hi [Name]. Group: Hi Team.

Dear Ms. Johnson,
Opening

State your purpose in the first sentence. Don't bury the main point.

I'm writing to request approval for the Q3 marketing budget.
Body

Keep paragraphs to 2-3 sentences. Use bullet points for lists. Bold key dates and numbers.

The total requested budget is $45,000, broken down as follows:\n- Digital ads: $25,000\n- Events: $15,000\n- Content: $5,000

How to Format Emails

  1. 1

    Select context

    Choose the email context (Formal, Casual, Follow-up, Apology) to get tone-appropriate suggestions.

  2. 2

    Enter details

    Fill in the recipient, subject, and key points. The more specific your input, the better the formatted output.

  3. 3

    Generate

    Click Generate to produce a professionally formatted email with proper structure, spacing, and sign-off.

  4. 4

    Copy and send

    Copy the formatted email to your clipboard and paste it into your email client. Adjust any personal details before sending.

Common Email Mistakes

  • Vague subject lines — "Question" or "Hi" get ignored. Be specific about the topic and urgency.
  • Walls of text — emails over 200 words have significantly lower response rates.
  • No clear call to action — always state what you need and by when.
  • Missing sign-off — even casual emails should end with a professional closing.

FAQ

What is proper email formatting for professional communication?

Professional emails follow a clear structure: a descriptive subject line, appropriate greeting, concise body paragraphs with a clear purpose, a call to action or next steps, and a professional sign-off. Formatting includes proper spacing, bullet points for multiple items, and consistent font styling.

How do I format an email for different contexts?

Formal emails use structured greetings (Dear Mr./Ms.), complete sentences, and professional closings (Sincerely, Best regards). Casual business emails can use Hi/Hello with a friendly tone while maintaining clarity. The level of formality should match your relationship with the recipient and the email's purpose.

What makes a good email subject line?

Effective subject lines are specific (mention the topic or action needed), concise (under 50 characters), and actionable (include verbs when possible). Avoid vague subjects like 'Question' or 'Follow up'. Instead use 'Q3 Budget Review - Action Needed by Friday'.

How do I format emails with multiple recipients?

When emailing multiple people, use the greeting 'Hi Team' or 'Dear All'. Address specific action items to named individuals using @mentions or bold text. Use bullet points for clarity and keep the email scannable. For formal group emails, list all recipients in the greeting.

More tools