Introduction

Hi, I’m Jonathan Mitchell, IELTS examiner and writing trainer.
In the IELTS General Training Writing Task 1, many letters require you to request information, make a complaint, or apologise politely.
Your ability to control tone — not too demanding, not too casual — is what differentiates a Band 6 from a Band 8 or 9.

In this lesson, I’ll show you how to make Polite Requests & Apologies naturally in Formal, Semi-Formal, and Informal letters, with sample phrases, grammar structures, and Band 9 examples.

Why Politeness Matters

IELTS examiners assess your Lexical Resource and Task Achievement, which include tone and appropriateness.
If your tone sounds rude, abrupt, or overly casual, you’ll lose marks even if your grammar is correct.

✅ Example:

Could you please send me the report by Friday?Polite and natural
Send me the report by Friday.Too direct; Band 6 tone

Politeness shows linguistic control, social awareness, and mastery of register — key indicators of high-level writing ability.

Polite Requests — Grammar and Tone

Requests can be made in many ways depending on the formality level.

🔹 Formal Letters

Use modal verbs and indirect structures:

Purpose

Example Phrases

Making a request

I would be grateful if you could… / I would appreciate it if you would…

Asking for information

Could you please provide me with… / I am writing to inquire about…

Asking for action

I would like to request that… / It would be appreciated if…

Band 9 Example (Formal):

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am writing to request information about the upcoming training seminar your company is hosting. I would be grateful if you could send me details regarding the registration process and schedule.

Thank you in advance for your assistance.

Yours faithfully,
Jonathan Mitchell

🔹 Semi-Formal Letters

When writing to someone you know professionally (like a landlord or manager), use a polite but friendlier tone.

Purpose

Example Phrases

Requesting help

Could you please… / Would it be possible to…

Asking for permission

Do you think I could…? / Would you mind if I…?

Following up politely

Just wondering if you’ve had a chance to look at…

Example (Semi-Formal):

Dear Mr Clark,

I hope you’re well. I was wondering if it would be possible to reschedule our meeting from Thursday to Friday afternoon, as I have another appointment at that time.

Please let me know if that works for you. Thank you for your understanding.

Best regards,
Jonathan Mitchell

🔹 Informal Letters

When writing to a friend or relative, you can sound warm and natural:

Purpose

Example Phrases

Asking a favour

Can you do me a favour and…? / Would you mind helping me with…?

Asking for advice

What do you think I should do about…? / Any suggestions for…?

Making a casual request

Could you send me the photos when you get a chance?

Example (Informal):

Hi Emma,

Hope you’re doing great! Could you please send me the contact details of your landlord? I’m looking for a new flat in your area and thought he might have a vacancy.

Thanks a lot — really appreciate it!

Cheers,
Jonathan

Apologies — Expressing Regret Politely

IELTS letters often require you to apologise for a mistake, inconvenience, or misunderstanding.
Tone should always be sincere and proportionate — not overly dramatic or defensive.

🔹 Formal Apologies

Purpose

Example Phrases

Acknowledging a mistake

I sincerely apologise for… / Please accept my apologies for…

Explaining briefly

The delay was due to unforeseen circumstances.

Offering a solution

I will ensure this does not happen again. / I would be happy to…

Band 9 Example (Formal):

Dear Customer Service Team,

I am writing to apologise for missing my scheduled interview on Monday. Unfortunately, I was delayed due to a transport strike and was unable to reach your office on time.

I would greatly appreciate the opportunity to reschedule the meeting at your convenience.

Yours sincerely,
Jonathan Mitchell

🔹 Semi-Formal Apologies

Use friendly but professional expressions.

Purpose

Example Phrases

Polite regret

I’m really sorry about… / Please forgive me for…

Short explanation

It happened because…

Offering correction

I’ll make sure it doesn’t happen again.

Example (Semi-Formal):

Dear Mrs Jenkins,

I’m really sorry for not returning your call earlier. I was caught up in a meeting and couldn’t respond until now.

I’ll make sure to get back to you more promptly in the future.

Best regards,
Jonathan

🔹 Informal Apologies

Be friendly and natural — use contractions and light expressions.

Purpose

Example Phrases

Small mistake

Sorry I couldn’t make it yesterday! / I feel terrible about missing your party.

Explaining casually

I was stuck in traffic all evening!

Showing care

Hope you’re not too upset — I’ll make it up to you!

Example (Informal):

Hi Ben,

I’m so sorry I couldn’t come to your birthday dinner last night. I got held up at work, and by the time I finished, it was already too late.

Let’s grab lunch this weekend — my treat!

Cheers,
Jonathan

Common Mistakes in Requests & Apologies

Mistake

Why It’s a Problem

Fix

Being too direct

Sounds rude or abrupt

Use modal verbs (could, would, may)

Overusing “please”

Feels unnatural

Use once per paragraph

Forgetting to explain the reason

Sounds incomplete

Add a short, logical reason

Over-apologising

Weakens tone

One clear apology is enough

Politeness Ladder – From Direct to Indirect

Tone Level

Example Request

Use When…

Direct

Send me the report.

Only informal letters

Neutral Polite

Could you send me the report?

Semi-formal settings

Highly Polite

I would be grateful if you could send me the report.

Formal or official contexts

Band 8 Tip: The higher the formality, the more indirect the structure.

Mini Practice

Rewrite the following sentences to make them more polite:

1️⃣ I want you to reply soon.I would appreciate it if you could reply at your earliest convenience.
2️⃣ I’m sorry for mistake.Please accept my apologies for the mistake.
3️⃣ Can you fix it?Would it be possible for you to fix it?

Quick Self-Check

Before submitting your letter, ask:

  • Did I use polite expressions suited to the situation?
  • Is my tone consistent throughout?
  • Did I explain reasons briefly and clearly?
  • Have I used correct sign-offs for the level of formality?

If yes, your tone is polished and professional — a clear sign of Band 7 + writing.

Summary & Next Steps

Polite language shows maturity, control, and social awareness — all key to achieving Band 8–9 in General Training Task 1.
Balance sincerity with precision: use modal verbs, indirect requests, and measured apologies.

Next, move to Useful Letter Phrases & Vocabulary to build your own library of expressions for every letter type.
You can also revisit the IELTS Writing Overview: Format, Scoring & Key Skills or review official tone samples on IELTS.org.