Skip to main content
Back to Writing generators

Writing

Email Opener Line Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

An email opener line generator solves one of the most common writing problems: knowing how to start. The first sentence of an email appears as preview text in Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail — sitting right next to the subject line and deciding whether the message gets opened at all. Generic openers like 'I hope this email finds you well' kill reply rates before anyone reads word two. This tool lets you choose your email purpose — cold outreach, follow-up, networking, job application, or sales pitch — and set a tone to match your recipient. Generate up to six options at once, compare angles, and pick the line that fits the contact. Swapping a weak opener is one of the highest-leverage edits you can make to underperforming outreach.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select your email purpose from the Email Purpose dropdown — choose the context that most closely matches your actual send.
  2. Choose a tone that fits your relationship with the recipient and your brand voice.
  3. Set the count to six or higher so you have enough options to compare different angles.
  4. Click Generate and read through all the lines — note which one immediately feels right for your specific recipient.
  5. Copy the strongest opener and paste it as the first sentence of your email, then personalize it with a specific detail before sending.

Use Cases

  • Testing 6 cold outreach openers across a B2B sales sequence in Apollo or Lemlist
  • Drafting a follow-up opener that acknowledges a missed reply without sounding passive-aggressive
  • Writing the first line of a job application email sent directly to a hiring manager's inbox
  • Opening a partnership pitch to a Substack writer or newsletter brand you want to collaborate with
  • Reconnecting with a former client on LinkedIn after a 12-month gap

Tips

  • Generate openers in both friendly and direct tones for the same purpose, then pick the best line regardless of your original tone preference.
  • If you recognize a generic-sounding opener in the results, it often still works as a structural template — swap the generic phrase for a specific one.
  • For cold outreach, avoid openers that start with 'I' — reframe any generated line that does so it leads with the recipient's context instead.
  • Pair a question-style opener with a short two-sentence email body for higher reply rates on cold pitches where brevity signals confidence.
  • Save five to ten openers that performed well in real sends — over time you will notice which tone and angle consistently wins for your audience.
  • For follow-up emails, choose a line that acknowledges the prior message without sounding apologetic — tone down any generated line that feels passive.

FAQ

what makes a good cold email opener line

The strongest cold openers are specific and recipient-focused rather than self-introductory. Referencing a recent company announcement, a published article, or a mutual connection signals real research. Avoid starting with 'I' — it immediately centers the sender and drops open-loop tension before it forms.

how do I choose the right tone for my email

Friendly works for most startup, marketing, and creative outreach. Direct suits time-pressed B2B executives who prefer brevity over warmth. Formal is safest for legal, finance, or senior corporate contacts. Curious works well for pitches where you want the recipient engaged rather than sold to.

can I use generated email openers in automated sequences

Yes — openers that are specific in angle but don't require recipient-level data hold up across a broad list. If a line references a specific achievement or event, add a merge field so it stays believable at scale. For high-volume drip campaigns, generate a few variants and A/B test open and reply rates.