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Email P.S. Line Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

An email P.S. line generator gives you postscript lines that quietly boost engagement at the end of an email. The P.S. is one of the most-read parts of any email — many people skim to the bottom first — which makes it prime real estate for a reminder, a call to action, or a personal touch. This tool offers effective postscript lines you can adapt to your message. Choose how many you want and pick the one that fits. It is ideal for email marketers, newsletter writers, and anyone sending outreach. Use the P.S. to reinforce your single most important point or call to action, rather than introducing something new, since its power comes from giving a skimmer one clear thing to do. Keep it short and a little personal, and do not overuse it — a P.S. on every email loses its impact.

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Free forever — no account required

How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many P.S. lines you want.
  2. Click Generate to produce postscripts.
  3. Pick one that fits your email.
  4. Use it to reinforce your key point.

Use Cases

  • Adding a P.S. to an email
  • Boosting email engagement
  • Reinforcing a call to action
  • Writing newsletter sign-offs
  • Improving outreach replies

Tips

  • Reinforce one key point or CTA.
  • Keep it short and personal.
  • Do not introduce something new.
  • Do not put a P.S. on every email.

FAQ

why is the P.S. so effective

Many readers skim to the bottom of an email first, so the P.S. is one of the most-read lines. That makes it prime real estate for a reminder, a call to action, or a personal touch that catches even the skimmers.

what should i put in a P.S.

Reinforce your single most important point or call to action, rather than introducing something new. The P.S. works by giving a skimming reader one clear thing to remember or do, so keep it focused on that one message.

can i overuse the P.S.

Yes. A P.S. on every single email loses its impact and starts to feel formulaic. Use it when you genuinely have one key point to underline, and keep it short and a little personal so it still feels like a deliberate, human touch.