Why this category exists

Notice letters exist because some communications must be on the record by law or contract — not as courtesy, but as proof. The templates in this category are written with that purpose in mind. Each one names the operative date, references the relevant clause or statute, and stops short of drama. Tenancy and labor law in particular reward precision and punish casualness; a notice that misses a procedural element can be voided. Whenever a notice has legal weight in your jurisdiction, treat the template as a starting point and confirm the local requirements before sending. The structure below will be correct; the specific notice period, delivery method, or required language may vary by state, country, or municipality.

The shape of a strong Notice Letter

Every letter in this category follows the same broad arc: an opening that names the subject, a middle that does the substantive work, and a close that names the next step. Within that arc, the tone, the length, and the level of formality vary with the situation, but the structural skeleton is the same. Writers who internalize this skeleton can produce a competent letter in fifteen minutes; writers who don't tend to draft and redraft for an hour and still send something that reads as awkward. A useful complement to this section is our structural drafting cheatsheet, which lays out the same arc on a single page.

The opening should never bury the lede. The recipient should know within the first two sentences what the letter is about and what they are being asked to do, even if the rest of the letter expands on that ask. The middle should be the section where you spend the most time editing — not because it should be the longest, but because it carries the substantive weight, and the difference between a generic middle and a specific one is the difference between a letter that gets a reply and one that doesn't. The close should always include a clear next step: a deadline, a meeting time, a contact method. A letter without a next step puts the burden on the recipient to figure out what to do, and many will simply file it.

Tone for this category

The tone of a successful Notice Letter tends to sit in a specific register. It is professional without being stiff, warm without being familiar, and direct without being blunt. The tone you reach for in casual email — the contractions, the informal sign-offs, the unstructured paragraphs — almost always reads as too informal in this category. The tone you might reach for in a legal contract — the passive constructions, the throat-clearing phrases, the procedural opening — almost always reads as too formal. Aim for the middle: write the way a thoughtful colleague would write to a counterpart they respect but don't know well.

The single most useful pre-send habit, regardless of which letter in this category you are writing, is to read the draft aloud. Reading aloud catches the awkward sentence rhythm, the unintentional condescension, and the over-formal phrases that look fine on screen but sound wrong out loud. Writers who do this consistently often pair it with our five-pass editing routine, which adds a few additional checks for specificity and mechanics.

The seven habits of effective Notice Letters

  1. Lead with the word "Notice" so the recipient sees the document type immediately.
  2. Cite the contractual or statutory provision that authorizes the notice.
  3. State the effective date with a full month name and four-digit year.
  4. Use a delivery method that creates proof of receipt (certified mail, courier, or signed acknowledgment).
  5. Keep editorial commentary out — notices are records, not arguments.
  6. Verify the required notice period in your jurisdiction before sending.
  7. Save the original signed copy and the proof of delivery together.

What to avoid

The mistakes that undercut a Notice Letter are usually the same handful, repeated across thousands of drafts. Burying the request in the third paragraph. Over-explaining the backstory. Mismatched tone between salutation and sign-off. Vague specifics — "in a timely manner," "the appropriate party," "a reasonable amount." Forgetting the next step. Skipping the read-aloud pass. None of these are exotic; all of them are easy to fix; almost no draft is sent without at least one of them creeping in. The five-minute pre-send checklist that fixes them is worth more than another hour of drafting.

Templates in this category

See all 32 Notice Letters →