The first sentence of your cover letter is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Recruiters spend seconds — not minutes — scanning applications. So if your opener is “I am writing to express my interest in the position,” you’ve already lost them.
Starting strong isn’t about being flashy. It’s about showing, right away, that you’re a real person who understands the role and has something worth saying. Here are 10 opening lines that actually work, plus the thinking behind each one.
Most cover letters start the same way. Generic. Stiff. Forgettable. When a recruiter is reading through dozens of applications for a single internship or entry-level role, a bland opener signals a bland candidate — even if the rest of your letter is great.
Your first two sentences set the tone for everything that follows. They tell the recruiter whether you’ve done your homework, whether you can communicate clearly, and whether you’re genuinely excited about this role — not just any role.
Nail the opening, and the rest of the letter has a much better shot at actually being read.
“Last semester, I led a team of four students to grow our campus organization’s social media following by 60% in three months — and I’d bring that same approach to the marketing coordinator role at [Company].”
Why it works: You’re not telling them you’re a hard worker. You’re showing it. Numbers and context make achievements feel real and credible.
“The data analyst internship at [Company] is exactly the kind of role I’ve been building toward — combining my statistics coursework with the financial modeling I’ve been practicing on my own.”
Why it works: You’ve named the role, connected it to your background, and made it clear this isn’t a copy-paste application.
“I’ve followed [Company]’s work in sustainable packaging since your 2025 partnership announcement, and your commitment to reducing plastic waste connects directly to the environmental research I’ve been doing in my materials science program.”
Why it works: It signals you went beyond the job description. Recruiters notice when candidates actually know what the company does.
“I’ve spent the past two summers writing content for a 50,000-subscriber newsletter — which is what drew me to the content marketing role at [Company].”
Why it works: Relevant experience lands in the first sentence, not buried three paragraphs in after a bunch of enthusiasm.
“I didn’t expect to fall in love with financial analysis during my accounting elective, but here I am applying for your finance internship because I genuinely can’t stop thinking about valuation models.”
Why it works: Personality. Specificity. It’s a little unexpected, which makes it memorable without feeling like a gimmick.
“Growing up in a bilingual household made me fluent in Spanish and deeply curious about cross-cultural communication — which is exactly why the global marketing internship at [Company] caught my attention.”
Why it works: Personal context gives recruiters something to remember you by, and it ties your background directly to why you’d be good at the job.
“[Name], a software engineer on your team, encouraged me to apply after we connected at a virtual recruiting session and talked about your team’s approach to backend infrastructure.”
Why it works: A warm introduction carries real weight. If you have one, lead with it.
“You’re looking for a product management intern who can bridge technical and non-technical teams. I’ve spent two years as a CS major who also runs a student consulting group — and I’ve learned to do exactly that.”
Why it works: You’ve read the job description carefully and you’re responding directly to what they need. That’s rarer than it should be.
“What does it take to build a brand that college students actually trust? That question has shaped every marketing project I’ve worked on, and it’s why I’m applying to join [Company]’s campus marketing team.”
Why it works: A question creates forward momentum. Just make sure it’s genuinely tied to the role — not a rhetorical trick that goes nowhere.
“I’ve been building iOS apps as a hobby since high school, and after three years of CS coursework, I’m ready to contribute to a professional engineering team. [Company]’s mobile product is one I use daily and have strong opinions about.”
Why it works: Passion without evidence sounds hollow. Passion with a track record sounds like someone worth hiring.
Even a strong letter can be derailed by a weak first sentence. Here’s what to skip:
The best opening line is one that could only be written for this specific job at this specific company. That means doing a little homework before you write a single word.
Read the job description carefully. Find the two or three things they care about most. Check the company’s recent news, social media, or mission statement. Then ask yourself: what do I have that connects directly to what they need?
That connection is your opening line.
It takes an extra 15 minutes per application. It’s worth it every time.
A strong opening gets you into the conversation. But you also need the right opportunities to apply to in the first place.
WayUp is built specifically for college students and recent grads searching for internships and entry-level roles. Employers on the platform — including companies like CVS Health, L’Oréal, and HSBC — actively search for candidates and reach out directly. You’re not just sending applications into a void.
Creating a profile is free, and WayUp surfaces roles matched to your interests and experience. Once your cover letter is ready, you’ll have real places to send it.
How long should the opening paragraph of a cover letter be?
Two to four sentences is the sweet spot. Hook the reader quickly and move into the body of the letter. A long opening buries the lead and loses momentum fast.
Should I mention the company name in my opening line?
Yes, when it feels natural. Naming the company signals that you wrote this letter for them specifically — not recycled it from another application.
Is it okay to start a cover letter with a question?
It can work, but only if the question is genuinely relevant to the role and leads directly into your qualifications. Skip rhetorical questions that feel like a trick.
What if I don’t have much experience yet? How do I start my cover letter?
Lead with what you do have: relevant coursework, a class project, a personal interest backed by action, or a transferable skill from a part-time job or campus involvement. Specificity matters more than years of experience.
How do I know if my opening line is too generic?
Ask yourself: could any other applicant have written this exact sentence? If yes, rewrite it. Your opening should only make sense coming from you.
Should the tone of my opening match the company’s tone?
Yes. A startup with a casual, personality-driven brand will respond better to a conversational opener. A law firm or financial institution may expect something more formal. Read the company’s website and job posting for tone cues before you write anything.
How often should I change my cover letter opening for different applications?
Every single time. The opening is the part that most needs to be customized. The middle sections can be adapted, but your first two sentences should always be specific to the role and company you’re applying to.
Your cover letter opening is your first impression. Make it specific, make it sound like you then go find the roles worth writing it for. on Wayup.com
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