Visa Document Templates & Sample Letters

Free, ready-to-use templates for every document your visa application needs. Cover letters, invitation letters, sponsor letters, and more - customized by country and visa type.

Priya Sharma
Immigration Attorney & Editor-in-Chiefยทยท14 min read
Templates
10+ types
Countries
34 covered
Formats
Copy-paste ready
Cost
Free

Why these documents matter

Most visa rejections are not caused by ineligibility - they are caused by poorly prepared documents. A weak cover letter, a missing invitation letter, or an incomplete sponsor declaration can get your application refused even when you fully qualify on paper. Consular officers are not psychic; they read what you submit and form an impression in two or three minutes.

Embassy officers review hundreds of applications daily. Your documents need to be clear, complete, and professionally structured. The templates on this page give you the exact format that consular officers expect - tested across 34 countries and adapted for each visa type by our immigration team.

Every template on this page is free to use. Copy it, fill in your details, and submit with confidence. No email sign-up, no paywall, no PDF gating.

Which documents do you need?

Use this decision table to identify exactly which letters and forms your situation requires. Each row links to the relevant template page.

Your situationDocuments needed
Tourist visa (self-funded)Cover letter + bank statements + travel itinerary
Tourist visa (visiting someone)Cover letter + invitation letter + host's documents
Tourist visa (sponsored)Cover letter + sponsor letter + sponsor's financials
Business visaCover letter + employer letter + invitation from host company
Work visaCover letter + employer letter + signed contract
Student visaCover letter + admission letter + financial proof
Family visitCover letter + invitation letter + proof of relationship
Schengen visa (any type)Cover letter + travel insurance + itinerary + accommodation

All templates

How to write a strong visa letter

These ten universal principles apply to every visa document on this site. Apply them to anything you submit - and you will already be ahead of 80% of applicants whose letters get flagged for sloppiness.

  1. Be specific - dates, names, addresses, amounts. Never write "around April" when you can write "15โ€“28 April 2026".
  2. Be concise - one page maximum for cover letters. Officers skim; they do not read.
  3. Be honest - fabrication equals a permanent ban, often on biometric record so you cannot reapply under a different name.
  4. Match your application form (DS-160, VAF, IMM, Schengen form) - every name, date, address, employer, salary must match exactly.
  5. Print on plain white A4 or US Letter paper. Sign in blue or black ink so officers can tell the original from a photocopy.
  6. Include reference numbers - application ID, passport number, appointment confirmation - at the top of every letter.
  7. Date the letter within 30 days of submission. Stale letters look like recycled templates.
  8. Use formal business letter format. "Hi, please give me visa" is a real example from a rejected file. Don't be that person.
  9. Address it to "The Visa Officer" or the specific consulate. Generic salutations ("To whom it may concern") are fine but "The Visa Officer" is better.
  10. Attach every supporting document you reference in the letter. If the letter mentions "hotel booking attached", that booking had better be in the file.

Common mistakes that get documents rejected

  1. Generic copy-paste without customization. Officers spot template language instantly - "I will visit your beautiful country" appears in roughly half of all refused files.
  2. Inconsistent dates between cover letter, itinerary, flight booking, and hotel reservation. Even a one-day mismatch flags the file.
  3. Sponsor letter submitted without the sponsor's financial proof attached. A declaration of support is worthless without bank statements behind it.
  4. Invitation letter without the host's residence proof. The host must prove they actually live where they say they live.
  5. No signature or no date. This sounds trivial; it is the single most common reason letters are returned.
  6. Wrong consulate or embassy address in the header. If you submit at the French embassy in Lagos, the letter must address the French embassy in Lagos.
  7. Amounts shown in the wrong currency. Use the destination country's currency, with your own currency in parentheses if helpful.
  8. Missing passport number or application reference at the top of the letter. Officers process files in batches; an unidentifiable letter goes to the bottom of the pile.
  9. Letter longer than one page. Officers stop reading after page one - your strongest point should be in the first paragraph.
  10. Employer letter not on company letterhead, or on a letterhead obviously generated in Microsoft Word the night before. Real letterheads have logos, registered addresses, phone numbers, and tax IDs.

Documents by country

Quick reference for which documents are required versus recommended by each major destination. "Required" means the visa will be rejected without it; "Recommended" means strongly suggested and often makes the difference between approval and refusal.

CountryCoverInvitationSponsorEmployerNOCItineraryInsurance
๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡บ Schengen (all)RequiredIf visitingIf sponsoredIf employedSome countriesRequiredRequired
๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ United StatesRecommendedIf visitingIf sponsoredIf employedNot requiredNot requiredNot required
๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United KingdomRecommendedIf visitingIf sponsoredIf employedNot requiredRecommendedNot required
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ CanadaRecommendedIf visitingIf sponsoredIf employedNot requiredNot requiredNot required
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ AustraliaRecommendedIf visitingIf sponsoredIf employedNot requiredNot requiredNot required
๐Ÿ‡ฏ๐Ÿ‡ต JapanRequiredRequired (guarantor)RequiredIf employedNot requiredRequiredNot required
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ช UAEVariesIf visitingIf sponsoredRequiredSome casesNot requiredNot required

Related guides & templates

Frequently asked questions