Why Your Complaint Letter Matters
Most people write complaint letters and hear nothing back. Not because their complaint is invalid — but because the letter itself does not give the recipient a clear reason to act. A well-structured formal complaint letter changes that. It creates a paper trail, references the correct legal frameworks, and makes it easy for the organisation to respond in writing.
This guide walks through exactly how to write a complaint letter that gets taken seriously — whether you are complaining to a company, a financial institution, a landlord, or a regulator.
What to Include in a Formal Complaint Letter
A strong complaint letter should always include the following:
- Your full name and contact details — at the top of the letter, clearly laid out
- The date — important for establishing timelines and triggering response deadlines
- A clear reference or account number — if you have one, include it so the complaint can be matched to your record immediately
- A factual summary of events — in date order, without emotional language. What happened, when, and what you were told
- The specific outcome you are requesting — refund, apology, correction, or other remedy. Be precise
- A deadline for response — typically 14 days. This is not aggressive; it is standard practice
- Reference to relevant rights — Consumer Rights Act 2015, FCA regulations, or other applicable legislation
The Structure That Works
Keep your complaint letter to one page if possible. Longer letters are less likely to be read carefully. A good structure looks like this:
- Opening paragraph — state clearly that this is a formal complaint, give your reference number, and summarise what the complaint is about in one sentence
- Background — two or three short paragraphs setting out the facts chronologically. Stick to what is relevant
- The impact — briefly explain what the situation has caused you (financial loss, inconvenience, distress)
- What you want — a single clear paragraph stating the remedy you are requesting and by when
- Next steps — state that if you do not receive a satisfactory response within 14 days, you will escalate — to the Financial Ombudsman, Trading Standards, or another relevant body
Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the mistakes that cause complaint letters to be ignored or dismissed:
- Emotional language — phrases like “I am absolutely disgusted” weaken your letter. Replace with factual statements
- Vague requests — “I want this sorted” is not actionable. “I am requesting a full refund of £X within 14 days” is
- No deadline — without a response deadline, organisations will deprioritise your complaint
- Too much detail — include only what is necessary to understand the complaint. Irrelevant context dilutes the letter
- Not keeping a copy — always retain a copy of every letter you send and note the date it was sent
When to Escalate
If your complaint is not resolved within 8 weeks, or if you receive a final response you are unhappy with, you have the right to escalate. Depending on the type of organisation, this may mean:
- The Financial Ombudsman Service — for complaints against banks, insurers, and financial services firms
- Trading Standards — for consumer disputes with businesses
- The relevant sector ombudsman — energy, communications, property, legal services, and others all have dedicated schemes
At that stage, the formal complaint letter you sent at the start becomes part of your evidence. A well-drafted letter at the beginning makes escalation significantly more straightforward.
Need Help Writing Your Complaint Letter?
If you would rather have a professionally drafted complaint letter prepared on your behalf, Equisure Direct handles exactly this. We review your situation, prepare the correspondence, and make sure it is correctly structured, clearly evidenced, and addressed to the right person.
Get in touch for a free initial review — no obligation, and we will come back to you within one working day.