Why Formal Letters Are Your Best Friend in SPM English
Formal letters appear in the SPM English Writing paper (Paper 2, Part 2 — Guided Writing) almost every year. The format is fixed, the structure is predictable, and the marking is straightforward. Master this format and you’re guaranteed easy marks.
Yet students lose 3-5 marks on format alone. Here’s how to avoid that.
The Correct Format (Memorise This)
[Your Address Line 1]
[Your Address Line 2]
[Your Address Line 3]
[Date: 15 January 2026]
[Recipient's Name/Title]
[Recipient's Address Line 1]
[Recipient's Address Line 2]
[Recipient's Address Line 3]
Dear Sir/Madam, OR Dear Mr/Mrs [Name],
SUBJECT LINE IN CAPITALS
[Paragraph 1: State your purpose]
I am writing to [purpose] regarding [context].
[Paragraph 2-3: Content points]
Firstly, [content point 1 with elaboration].
Furthermore, [content point 2 with elaboration].
In addition, [content point 3 with elaboration].
[Final paragraph: Closing remark]
I hope you will give this matter your kind attention.
Thank you.
Yours faithfully, OR Yours sincerely,
[Leave a line gap]
[YOUR FULL NAME]
The Faithfully vs Sincerely Rule
This trips up half the candidates:
- Yours faithfully = when you wrote “Dear Sir/Madam” (you don’t know their name)
- Yours sincerely = when you used their name (“Dear Mr Tan”)
Mismatch = -1 mark. It’s the easiest mark to keep.
The 5 Most Common Format Mistakes
Mistake 1: No subject line Every formal letter needs a bolded or capitalised subject line after the greeting. It tells the reader (and the examiner) that you know the format.
Mistake 2: Putting YOUR name at the top instead of YOUR ADDRESS The top right section is your address. Your name goes at the bottom, after the sign-off.
Mistake 3: Using informal language “Hey” → “Dear Sir/Madam” “Gonna” → “Going to” “Thanks” → “Thank you” “Btw” → “In addition”
One informal word in a formal letter signals to the examiner that you don’t understand register.
Mistake 4: Not addressing all content points The question gives you specific points to include (usually in bullet form). Miss one = lose marks. Tick each off as you write.
Mistake 5: Starting every paragraph with “I” Vary your paragraph openings:
- “With reference to…”
- “It has come to my attention that…”
- “On behalf of the students of…”
- “I would like to suggest…”
How to Score 30+ on a 35-Mark Formal Letter
| Criteria | Max Marks | How to Maximise |
|---|---|---|
| Format | 3-4 | Follow the exact layout above |
| Content | 12-14 | Address ALL bullet points with elaboration |
| Language | 15-17 | Varied vocabulary, correct grammar, formal tone |
The difference between 25 and 32 is usually language quality. That means:
- Using transition words (Furthermore, Moreover, In addition)
- Varying sentence structure (not every sentence starts with “I”)
- Using formal vocabulary (“request” not “ask”, “inform” not “tell”)
Practice Strategy
Write one formal letter per week for 4 weeks. Each time, focus on a different format variation:
- Complaint letter to a company
- Request letter to the principal
- Letter to the editor about an issue
- Suggestion letter to local council
Get each one marked with specific comments on format, content, and language. Four letters with detailed feedback will prepare you for any formal letter the SPM throws at you.