The Hidden Cost of Cover Letters: Why Smart Companies Are Dropping Them
Cover letters have been a staple of job applications for decades. They are so embedded in hiring culture that most companies require them without ever questioning whether they serve a purpose. But a growing number of employers - including some of the most competitive talent acquirers in tech, finance, and healthcare - have quietly stopped asking for them.
They are not doing this because they are lazy or because they do not care about candidates. They are doing it because the data shows cover letters are costly, biased, and poor predictors of performance. Here is what that data actually says.
The Real Cost of Requiring Cover Letters
Most hiring teams think of cover letters as free information. The candidate writes it, the recruiter reads it, and the company gets another signal. But that framing ignores the costs on both sides of the equation.
Cost to the candidate
A tailored cover letter takes 30-45 minutes to write well. A candidate applying to 15 roles per week - a typical number for an active job seeker - spends 7-11 hours per week on cover letters alone. That is a part-time job on top of what is already a full-time effort. The candidates who can afford this time investment are not necessarily the best candidates. They are the ones with the most free time.
Cost to the employer
When you require cover letters, three things happen to your applicant pool. First, your application completion rate drops. Industry data shows that every additional required field reduces completion by 5-10%. A required cover letter - the most time-intensive field possible - reduces your applicant pool by an estimated 20-30%. Second, the candidates you lose disproportionately are senior professionals and passive candidates who will not invest 40 minutes in a speculative application. Third, the cover letters you do receive are increasingly AI-generated, making them even less useful as a signal.
Cost to your recruiting team
If a role receives 200 applications with cover letters, and your recruiter gives each one 60 seconds, that is over 3 hours of reading time per role. Multiply by 15-20 open roles and you have a recruiter spending 45-60 hours per month reading cover letters. That is time not spent on phone screens, candidate relationships, or pipeline building - all of which have higher ROI.
Why Cover Letters Are Poor Predictors
The fundamental assumption behind cover letters is that writing ability and self-presentation skills predict job performance. For most roles, this assumption does not hold.
They measure writing, not job skills
Unless the role is a writing-intensive position, a cover letter tests a skill that is irrelevant to daily work. A brilliant engineer who writes awkward cover letters is still a brilliant engineer. A mediocre salesperson who writes polished cover letters is still mediocre at selling. The signal is orthogonal to the outcome you care about.
They reward conformity, not capability
Cover letter "best practices" create a narrow template that all candidates try to fit. Open with enthusiasm. Show you researched the company. Connect your experience to the role. Close with a call to action. This format rewards candidates who know the formula and penalizes those who do not - which correlates with socioeconomic background and access to career coaching, not job ability.
AI has made them meaningless
By 2026, the majority of cover letters are either fully AI-generated or heavily AI-assisted. Recruiters are now reading AI output and trying to evaluate humans through it. This is not a useful exercise. The candidates who use AI to write better cover letters are not necessarily better employees - they are just better at prompting. Requiring a document that most applicants outsource to a language model adds friction without adding signal.
What Smart Companies Use Instead
Dropping cover letters does not mean dropping candidate evaluation. It means replacing a low-signal requirement with higher-signal alternatives.
1. Structured application questions
Instead of an open-ended cover letter, ask 2-3 specific questions relevant to the role. "Describe a time you handled a production incident under pressure" tells you more about an SRE candidate than any cover letter. These questions are faster for candidates to answer, easier for recruiters to evaluate, and more predictive of actual job performance.
2. Skills-based matching
Rather than asking candidates to explain why they are qualified, evaluate their qualifications directly. Verified skills assessments, portfolio reviews, and competency-based profiles provide objective data that cover letters never could. This approach also reduces bias because it evaluates what candidates can do, not how well they can describe what they can do.
3. Two-sided matching platforms
The most effective alternative is eliminating the one-sided application entirely. On platforms where both candidates and employers express interest before any conversation begins, the cover letter becomes unnecessary. Both sides have already demonstrated mutual fit through the matching process. The first conversation starts from a position of shared interest rather than cold persuasion.
4. Video introductions (optional)
Some companies offer candidates the option - never the requirement - to record a 60-second introduction. This provides more signal than a written letter while taking less time. It shows communication style, enthusiasm, and personality in a way that text cannot. Making it optional ensures you do not filter out candidates who are uncomfortable on camera.
The Bias Problem Nobody Talks About
Cover letters introduce bias in ways that are difficult to detect and nearly impossible to audit.
- Name and background signals. Cover letters reveal the candidate name, writing style (which correlates with education level and native language), and often their current employer. All of these can trigger unconscious bias before the recruiter evaluates any qualifications.
- Enthusiasm bias. Recruiters tend to favor candidates who express strong enthusiasm for the company. But enthusiasm levels in cover letters correlate more with desperation and personality type than with actual interest or future engagement.
- Narrative privilege. Candidates with straightforward career paths write easy cover letters. Those with gaps, career changes, or non-traditional backgrounds must explain and justify - creating a disadvantage for the very candidates who might bring the most diverse perspectives.
- Time privilege. Employed professionals with demanding schedules cannot invest 40 minutes per application. Parents, caregivers, and people working multiple jobs are systematically disadvantaged by time-intensive application requirements.
How to Make the Transition
If you are ready to drop cover letters from your hiring process, here is a practical approach:
- Audit your current process. How many of your recruiters actually read cover letters? Survey them anonymously. The answer is usually far fewer than hiring managers assume.
- Replace, do not just remove. Dropping the cover letter without adding a better signal leaves a gap. Add 2-3 structured questions or adopt a matching platform that provides richer candidate data.
- Measure the impact. Track application completion rates, candidate quality scores, and time-to-hire before and after the change. Most companies see completion rates increase by 25-40% with no decrease in hire quality.
- Communicate the change. Candidates notice and appreciate when companies streamline their process. It signals that you respect their time - which is itself a recruiting advantage.
The Bottom Line
Cover letters persist because of inertia, not evidence. They cost candidates hours, cost recruiters time, introduce bias, and predict almost nothing about job performance. The companies that are winning the talent war in 2026 have replaced them with faster, fairer, and more predictive alternatives.
The question is not whether cover letters will disappear from hiring. It is whether your company will be ahead of or behind that curve.
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