How to Write a Cover Letter to a Journal Editor
Editors read your cover letter before your paper. A weak one earns a desk reject in minutes. Here's a paragraph-by-paragraph template that gets you read.
1. Why the Cover Letter Decides Your First Impression
Most authors treat the cover letter as a formality and paste in three generic
sentences. That is a mistake. The handling editor reads your cover letter before
they open the manuscript, and at high-volume journals they use it to make the
desk-rejection decision — whether your paper even goes out for review. A desk
reject can happen within 48 hours and accounts for 30–60% of rejections at
selective journals. Your letter is the one place where you, not your abstract,
get to argue why this paper belongs in this journal.
A strong cover letter does three jobs in under one page: it states what you did
and why it matters, it shows you understand the journal's scope, and it handles
the administrative checkboxes (originality, conflicts, suggested reviewers) so the
editor never has to chase you. Get those three right and you remove every easy
reason to say no.
What the Editor Is Scanning For
- Is this in scope for the journal? (Wrong-journal submissions get desk-rejected fast)
- Is the contribution clear in one sentence?
- Is it original and not under review elsewhere?
- Are there competent, non-conflicted reviewers I can assign?
2. The Six-Paragraph Structure That Works
Keep the letter to a single page — roughly 300–400 words. Editors handle dozens of
submissions a week and will not read a two-page essay. Use this skeleton and fill
each slot with one tight paragraph. Address it to the named editor-in-chief or
handling editor whenever you can find the name; "Dear Editor" is acceptable but
"Dear Editor-in-Chief Dr. Lee" signals you did your homework.
The Skeleton
- 1. Salutation + title, manuscript type, and journal name
- 2. The problem and your contribution in 2–3 sentences
- 3. Why it fits THIS journal's scope and readership
- 4. Key result with one concrete number
- 5. Originality, ethics, and no-dual-submission statement
- 6. Suggested/opposed reviewers + corresponding author contact
3. Paragraph 2 and 4: Make the Contribution Concrete
The body of the letter lives or dies on specificity. Do not write "we present novel
results on an important problem." Write what the problem is, what you did, and what
changed. Compare these two openings. Weak: "In this manuscript we study an important
question in our field and report interesting findings." Strong: "Current methods for
X fail when the input is sparse; we introduce a reweighting scheme that recovers
accuracy and reduces error by 23% on three public benchmarks." The second version
tells the editor exactly which subfield to route the paper to and gives them a number
to remember.
Lift your single strongest result into paragraph 4 with an actual figure — a
percentage, a sample size, a speedup, an effect size. Editors remember papers by
their headline number. If your work is qualitative or theoretical, substitute the
sharpest claim: "the first proof that..." or "a framework that unifies two
previously separate literatures." One concrete claim beats five vague adjectives.
실전 팁
- 1.Mirror one or two phrases from the journal's aims-and-scope page — it signals fit without sounding like flattery.
- 2.Name the gap your paper closes; editors think in terms of gaps, not topics.
- 3.Cut every instance of 'novel', 'interesting', and 'significant' unless you immediately back it with evidence.
4. The Administrative Lines That Prevent Delays
Paragraph 5 is boilerplate, but missing it creates back-and-forth that delays your
submission by days. Most journals require an explicit statement that the work is
original, has not been published before, and is not under consideration at another
journal. State it plainly: "This manuscript is original, has not been published
elsewhere, and is not under review at any other journal. All authors have approved
the submission and declare no conflicts of interest." If you have a relevant prior
conference version, disclose it here — "an earlier 8-page version appeared at
[Conference]; this manuscript adds 40% new content including X and Y" — because
editors run plagiarism checks and undisclosed overlap reads as misconduct.
Also confirm funding disclosures and ethics approvals if your field requires them
(IRB number for human subjects, data-availability statement for empirical work).
These are the items that, when missing, get your paper returned without review.
Copy-Paste Compliance Block
- Originality + not-under-review statement
- All-authors-approved statement
- Conflict-of-interest declaration
- Prior conference/preprint version disclosed (if any)
- Funding and ethics/IRB statements (if applicable)
5. Suggesting (and Opposing) Reviewers Without Backfiring
Many journals ask for 3–5 suggested reviewers, and a thoughtful list genuinely
speeds up handling — editors struggle to find willing experts. Suggest researchers
who know your subfield but are not your co-authors, advisor, or anyone from your
institution; a reviewer with a conflict gets discarded and makes you look careless.
Pick people you have cited, ideally from different research groups and countries to
show breadth. Give full names, affiliations, and emails so the editor can act
immediately.
You may also oppose reviewers, but use it sparingly — one or two names at most, and
only for a genuine, statable conflict (a direct competitor, a known hostile prior
interaction). Listing five opposed reviewers reads as defensive and invites
scrutiny. Editors are not obligated to honor any suggestion, so treat the list as a
courtesy that smooths their job, not as a way to engineer an easy review.
실전 팁
- 1.Never suggest a reviewer you have co-published with in the last 3–5 years — journals check.
- 2.A good suggested-reviewer list quietly tells the editor which subfield owns your paper.
6. Tailor for Resubmissions and Transfers
If you are resubmitting after a reject-and-resubmit, or transferring from a sister
journal, the cover letter changes. For a transfer, reference the prior manuscript
ID and summarize the earlier reviews honestly: "This paper was reviewed at [Journal];
we have addressed the two main concerns about sample size and added a robustness
check." Editors appreciate the head start and it signals integrity. Hiding a prior
rejection that the editor can see in a shared system damages your credibility.
For an invited revision that became a fresh submission, or a special-issue
submission, name the issue and the guest editor explicitly in paragraph 1 — these
route differently inside the editorial system and a missing reference can strand
your paper in the general queue for weeks.
Final Pre-Send Checklist
- One page, under 400 words, addressed to a named editor
- Contribution stated with one concrete number
- Explicit scope-fit sentence referencing the journal
- Originality, ethics, and prior-version disclosures present
- 3–5 conflict-free suggested reviewers with emails
- Corresponding author name, email, and ORCID at the bottom
- Journal name correct everywhere (the #1 copy-paste error)
PhD graduate who spent years tracking conference deadlines across computer science and engineering. Built ScholarDue after missing a submission window in the final year of candidacy and realizing no single tool tracked CFPs, extensions, and notification dates in one place.
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