The cover letter is on its last legs as a useful artifact in the developer hiring process. I am not arguing this; I am reporting it. I asked 22 hiring managers and senior recruiters at companies ranging from 50 to 8,000 people whether they read cover letters in 2026, and the answer was nearly unanimous: not really.
But "not really" hides a more useful answer. About 70% of the people I asked said they do skim the first 2-3 sentences of the cover letter when one is included. Almost none of them read past that. Which means the cover letter has not died — it has shrunk to about 50 words of useful surface area, and we are still writing 400-word ones into the void.
Here is what changed, and what to write instead.
What killed the long cover letter
Three forces converged in the last 18 months:
Volume. Senior eng listings now routinely get 600-1,500 applications. Even at a generous 30 seconds per cover letter, the recruiter would need 5-12 hours just to read the cover letters for a single role. They do not.
ATS pre-filtering. The cover letter rarely gets parsed for keyword matching the way the resume does. Some ATS systems do not even pass the cover letter to the recruiter unless explicitly configured to. So writing 400 words optimized for keyword density does almost nothing.
LLM-generated cover letters. This one is the killer. The recruiters I talked to said they can spot a model-generated cover letter inside two sentences ("I am writing to express my strong interest in the [Job Title] position at [Company Name]"). Once they see it, they stop reading. About 60% of the cover letters they receive now read this way.
What replaced the cover letter
The recruiters were unusually consistent on what they actually want, when they want anything at all:
1. A 2-3 sentence note in the application form's "additional notes" field. Specific to the role, not generic. Names one thing in the job description and one thing in your background that lines up. That is it.
Example that worked (paraphrased from a recruiter's screenshot, used with permission):
Hi Jen, the bit about migrating from monolith to event-driven services in your job posting matches what I just spent 14 months doing at Helio Labs. I shipped 4 of the 12 services and on-called for the platform. Would love to talk.
That is 50 words. It got a response. The same applicant's full cover letter (which they also sent, in their first attempt) did not.
2. A LinkedIn message to the hiring manager, not a cover letter. Same content, same length, sent in parallel with the application. Recruiters told me this is increasingly the norm and increasingly works for senior IC roles.
3. Nothing. Several of the recruiters said outright: if you cannot write something specific in 50 words, write nothing. A blank cover letter field is better than a generic one because the generic one signals you did not bother to read the listing.
The 50-word template that beats the 400-word cover letter
Three pieces, in this order:
- One specific thing from the listing that caught your eye. Not "I am excited about the company's mission" — something concrete from the role description.
- One specific thing from your background that lines up. A project, a result, a skill applied to a problem similar to theirs.
- A direct ask. "Open to a 20-minute conversation this week or next" beats "I look forward to hearing from you."
Done. 50 words. Send it. Move on.
What recruiters specifically warned against
These came up across multiple conversations, in roughly this frequency order:
- "I am a passionate developer with strong communication skills." Every recruiter I spoke to has stopped reading after this sentence. Always.
- Recapping the resume. They have the resume. The cover letter is not the place to repeat it.
- Generic enthusiasm about the company. "I have admired Acme Corp's work for years" — they know you have not. Skip it.
- Personal backstory unrelated to the role. Save it for the interview, where they will actually ask.
- Listing your soft skills. Same problem as on the resume. Soft skill claims with no evidence are filler.
When the long cover letter still works
Two situations, both narrow:
- You are changing careers. A career-change candidate genuinely needs the extra surface to explain the transition. Recruiters acknowledged they read these more carefully because the resume alone does not tell the story. Even then, target 200 words, not 400.
- The company explicitly asks for a long cover letter. Some companies (mostly mission-driven nonprofits, some early-stage startups, some agencies) do still ask for a real cover letter as part of their evaluation. When they ask, write one — and make it specific to that company.
For everyone else: 50 words, three pieces, send it, move on.
What to do this week
Pull up the last 5 jobs you applied to. If you sent a cover letter, note its word count. If it was over 100 words, it almost certainly was not read. Try the 50-word version on the next 5 applications and track the response rate.
If you are still doing the standard 400-word cover letter dance for every application, you are spending hours per week on something that has no signal. Reclaim that time.
For the broader playbook on what is actually working in 2026 hiring, I read 142 rejection emails from 18 tech friends covers what happens after the application gets in. And on the resume side, 12 phrases your ATS is quietly penalizing is the equivalent surgical fix.
Update May 2026 — see also: If the Cover Letter Is Mostly Dead, What Replaced It? 6 Substitutes I Tested — Only 2 Actually Got Replies
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