How to Write a Thank You Email After an Interview (With Examples)
Most candidates do not send a thank you email after an interview. That is the main reason to send one. It is a short piece of professional communication that takes less than 15 minutes and reinforces your interest at the exact moment the interviewer is forming their impression of you. Done well, it adds a positive data point. Done badly, it creates a negative one. Here is how to do it well.
When to send it
Send the email within 24 hours of the interview, ideally the same day or the following morning. The goal is to arrive while the conversation is still fresh. An email sent three days later reads as an afterthought rather than a genuine follow-up.
What to include
A good thank you email has four components, and none of them should be more than a few sentences:
- A direct thank you for the interviewer's time, naming the role and the date
- One specific thing from the conversation that reinforced your interest. This is the most important part. It proves you were actually listening.
- A brief restatement of why you are a strong fit, tied to something concrete from the interview
- A clear sign-off that acknowledges next steps without pressuring them
The right length
Aim for 150 to 200 words. Short enough to be read immediately, long enough to say something meaningful. A three-line email that only says "thank you for your time, I look forward to hearing from you" adds nothing. A 400-word email reads as excessive.
What not to do
Do not copy a template and change only the names. Interviewers who receive generic thank you emails recognise them instantly. Do not use the email to add information you forgot to mention during the interview: if something is important, find a way to include it in the interview itself. Do not follow up again within 24 hours if you have not heard back.
If you interviewed with multiple people
Send a separate email to each person you spoke with, referencing something specific from your conversation with each. An identical email to three people looks careless if they compare notes.
Example structure
Subject: Thank you, [Role Title] interview, [Date]
Hi [Name], thank you for taking the time to speak with me today about the [role] position. I particularly valued your comments on [specific topic] and it reinforced my interest in how [company] is approaching [relevant challenge]. Based on our discussion, I am confident that my experience in [specific area] could contribute meaningfully to the team. I look forward to hearing about the next steps, and please do not hesitate to get in touch if anything else would be helpful. Best regards, [Your name]
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