Executive Assistant Cover Letter Examples (2026)
Real cover letter openings, body paragraphs, and closings for executive assistants, with notes on what works and what doesn't.
Direct answer
Strong executive assistants cover letters open with a single specific outcome (not "I am writing to apply for…"), reference the company by name in the second sentence, and close by stating the next step. Discretion-led — open with the executive level (CEO, COO, CTO) and a high-stakes coordination win.
EA postings filter on the seniority of the executives supported and on confidentiality / discretion language. The cover letter's job is to do something the resume can't: tell one specific story that demonstrates fit.
Key takeaways
- Open with a shipped outcome. Skip "I am writing to apply for…" — it costs you the recruiter's first 30 seconds.
- Reference the company by name and mention something specific you've researched (a product launch, a recent press piece, a public engineering blog).
- Pick ONE story from your career that proves you can do the role. Don't summarize your resume.
- Close by stating the next step ("I'd welcome a 20-minute call to discuss…") not by thanking them.
Action steps
- Pick the strongest story from your career that demonstrates fit for this role. One story, told with specifics.
- Open with the outcome of that story. The first sentence is the most important sentence.
- Connect the story to one specific thing about the company. Naming a product, an article, or a recent event signals research.
- Close with a clear next step. Recruiters appreciate specificity over enthusiasm.
- Keep it under 300 words. Cover letters longer than that are rarely read end-to-end.
Strong opening lines
Examples that work for executive assistants:
- "Last quarter I anticipated supported a CEO with a 4-region travel cadence. I want to do the same kind of work at [Company], because [specific reason]."
- "As a executive assistant, I've spent the last two years doing exactly the work [Company] just announced — [specific reference]."
- "I noticed [Company] is hiring a executive assistant to [specific challenge from the posting]. The closest analog in my career: [your one-sentence story]."
Opening lines that don't work
These are the openings recruiters skim past, and we recommend cutting them:
- "I am writing to express my interest in the Executive Assistant position…" (every applicant says this)
- "I am a passionate executive assistant with X years of experience…" (passion is unverifiable filler)
- "Please find attached my resume for your consideration…" (assumes the resume will do the work)
The body paragraph: one story, well told
The body has one job: prove with a specific story that you can do the role. Pick the strongest story you have. For executive assistants, the story usually involves: Discretion-led — open with the executive level (CEO, COO, CTO) and a high-stakes coordination win.
Structure: situation → action → outcome. Two paragraphs at most. Quantify the outcome.
The closing: state the next step
Skip "Thank you for your time and consideration." That's filler. Instead, state the action you want next:
- "I'd welcome a 20-minute call to walk through how I'd approach [the specific challenge from the posting]."
- "I'm available for a screening call any afternoon next week."
- "I've attached a one-page case study from a similar project — happy to discuss it in a call."
Format and length
Under 300 words. Three to four short paragraphs. No headers. No bullet points. No PDF formatting tricks.
Plain text, professional voice, the same address block as your resume header at the top.