Last updated: 24 juin 2026
Writing Formal Letters and Emails

Writing Formal Letters and Emails: Professional Precision
In the TEF and TCF Writing exams (Task 2 of the TCF), you are often required to write a formal letter or email. Common topics include a letter of complaint, a job application, or a request to a city official. These tasks are the ultimate test of your Register Management, Politeness Formulas, and Logical Structure.
In this guide, we master the art of the formal French letter.
1. The Structure of a Formal Letter
A formal letter follows a precise hierarchy:
- Header: Your info and the recipient's info (often omitted in computer exams, but good to know).
- The Subject (Objet): “Objet : Réclamation concernant...”
- The Greeting: “Madame, Monsieur,”
- The Opening: State the reason for writing.
- The Body: Present your facts/arguments in clear paragraphs.
- The Closing: The mandatory "Formule de politesse."
2. Salutations and First Lines
- “Madame, Monsieur,” (The safest formal greeting).
- “Monsieur le Maire,” / “Madame la Directrice,” (If the title is known).
3. Expressing Purpose and Content
For a Complaint (Réclamation):
- “Je souhaite exprimer mon mécontentement.”: I wish to express my dissatisfaction.
- “Malgré mes appels répétés...”: Despite my repeated calls...
- : I ask you to please refund me.
4. Logical Connectors for Structure
A formal letter is built on logic.
- “Tout d'abord...”: First of all...
- “De plus / Par ailleurs...”: Furthermore...
5. The Closing Formula (Formules de Politesse)
This is the part most candidates fear. Here is the "Golden Rule":
- Standard: “Dans l'attente de votre réponse, je vous prie d'agréer, Madame, Monsieur, l'expression de mes salutations distinguées.”
6. Strategic Tips for Task 2 (Formal Writing)
- Vouvoiement is Mandatory: Never use "Tu."
- No SMS Language: Use full words and correct punctuation.
- Paragraphs: One idea = One paragraph. Use indentation or line breaks.
- Tone: Be firm but always polite. Never "shout" at the recipient.
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7. Cultural Note: "L'Administration Française"
In France and Quebec, administrative letters are a cultural ritual. There is a "right way" to ask for things. Being too direct can be seen as rude. Using the Conditionnel (“Je souhaiterais,” “Il serait possible de”) is the best way to show you understand the cultural nuances of hierarchy and respect.
8. Mastery through PrepMyFrench
Template Builder:
We providing interactive templates for "Job Application," "Complaint," and "Request for Info." You fill in the arguments, and the AI corrects the connectors.
AI Writing Evaluation:
Select the "Formal Letter of Complaint" topic.
Conclusion
A formal letter is your "Professional Face." By mastering the structures and formulas in this guide, you prove to the TEF/TCF examiners that you are ready for a job or a higher-education degree in the Francophone world. Precision and politeness are your best allies!
Next Topic: Reliving the past! Read about Narrating Past Events.
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