Business letters: Letterhead

Section: Correspondence and addresses

Go to the main page of this section: Correspondence and addresses – Guidelines and resources.

A letterhead is the heading that appears at the top of a business letter; it is a standard part of any letter written on behalf of an organization. (See Business letters: Model letter in recommended format.)

In contrast, a business letter written by a person on their own behalf usually doesn’t contain any letterhead.

The letterhead identifies the sender’s organization and generally contains the following information about the organization:

  • the logo or visual signature
  • the address
  • the telephone number
  • the email address
  • the website address

Example of a corporate letterhead:

Description of image

The company logo is placed to the left of the company name, which appears in large print.

The address appears below the company name:

100-1934 Britannica Boulevard, London, Ontario N1Z 1Y9

Below the address are two columns of text. In the left column are the company’s phone number and fax number:

Phone: 519-123-7654
Fax: 519-123-7655

In the right column are the company’s email address and website:
companyname@victorion.ca
website: www.companywebsite.com

Canadian federal government letterheads are bilingual and must be designed in accordance with the guidelines established by the Treasury Board Secretariat in the Design Standard for the Federal Identity Program (opens in new tab).

Example of a federal letterhead:

Description of image

Departmental signature of Public Services and Procurement Canada

The English address is to the left of the French address

Translation Bureau
Parliamentary Debates
5th Floor
Vanguard Building
171 Slater Street
Ottawa, Ontario  K1P 5H7

Bureau de la traduction
Débats parlementaires
5e étage
Édifice Vanguard
171, rue Slater
Ottawa (Ontario)  K1P 5H7

For information on the order in which the official languages should appear in a bilingual federal government letterhead, see the section Order of the official languages in signatures (opens in new tab) on the page Treatment of the official languages: Design Standard for the Federal Identity Program (opens in new tab).

Note: If the sender’s address doesn’t appear in the letterhead, include a return address below the letterhead or below the signature. (For more information, see the article Business letters: Return address.)

Additional information

Other resources

Copyright notice for Writing Tips Plus

© His Majesty the King in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Public Services and Procurement
A tool created and made available online by the Translation Bureau, Public Services and Procurement Canada

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