How to write a formal letter for IELTS General Training Writing Task 1
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A) Iโm interested in doing some voluntary work in your hospital.
B) Iโm writing to apply for the position of volunteer worker at the hospital.
C) I am writing this letter in support of my application to join the hospital as a volunteer worker.
In IELTS General Training Writing Task 1, itโs important that you understand the difference between formal language (Example C above), semi-formal language (Example B above) and informal language (Example A above) because youโll need to write a letter in one of these styles.
Iโve found over many years of teaching that most test takers need more help with writing formal letters, so in this post Iโm going to show you features of formal language using an example task and answer fromย The Official Cambridge Guide to IELTS.
IELTS General Training Writing Task 1
The General Training Writing Task 1 below is an example of one that asks you to write a formal letter.
You know that the letter has to be formal because itโs to someone you donโt know (a staff member at your local hospital) about something important (your application to work there).

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It also tells you to start your letter with โDear Sir or Madam,โ, which is a signal that you need to write a letter thatโs more formal in style!
If this wasnโt about IELTS but about a real job application, youโd need to write a formal letter if you didnโt know the person you were writing to, a semi-formal letter if you knew the person you were writing to but perhaps not very well, and possibly an informal email if the person was actually a good friend of yours (or talk to them instead).
IELTS General Training Writing Task 1 example answer
If you read the following answer youโll see that the writer writes a formal letter, making the purpose of the letter clear, explaining why theyโd like to do voluntary work at the hospital and what type of work they could do, and saying when they would be available.

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As youโll see below, the features that make the letter formal are good examples of the kind of language you could use if you have to write a formal letter.
Formal language
So, what language features are formal and which should you avoid in a formal letter?
Formal language features include:
- formal openings, e.g. โDear Sir or Madam,โ and closings, e.g. โYours faithfully,โ
- polite requests, e.g. โI would be most grateful if you couldโฆโ
- past forms of modal verbs, e.g. โI would be able toโฆโ (rather than โI will be able toโฆโ) and โ…responsibilities I might encounterโฆ (rather than โ…responsibilities I may encounterโฆ โ)
- the use of more formal vocabulary, e.g. โpositionโ and โroleโ (rather than โjobโ), โprovideโ (rather than โgiveโ), โencounterโ (rather than โmeetโ) and โassistโ (rather than โhelpโ)
Language features you should avoid in a formal letter include:
- contractions, e.g. Iโll beโฆ (instead of โI will beโฆโ)
- direct requests, e.g. โCan you look atโฆ?โ
- ellipsis (writing sentences that can be understood but with words missing), e.g. Hope you find my application suitable (instead of โI hope that you find my application suitable)
- informal vocabulary, e.g. โold-timersโ (rather than โthe elderlyโ)
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