Hardship and Resignation Letters

by Kay on April 12, 2016

Trying to leave a job gracefully and successfully asking for a loan or extension have one thing in common: they’re hard to do well. Writing a proper letter seems easy until you sit down to do it. So I have 24 new hardship letters at LetterofHardship.net and 26 new resignation samples at ResignationLetters.biz that will help you get on the right track.

There are a lot of reasons an insurance company might refuse to cover your medical bills, which is why most of the new hardship letters are medical appeals. These request coverage when the company refuses due to being out of network, not having a referral, not having a medically necessary procedure, and not being a dependent on someone else’s coverage. There are also letters for students who need to transfer schools or get a waiver on the LSAT fee.

The new resignation samples are for those of you who have a negative reason for leaving your job but want to be as diplomatic as possible. While I have several articles on why you should leave out negative information as much as you can, there are some very tactful ways to say you’re leaving due to personal reasons, company changes, benefits, low salary, the position being a bad fit and more. If you’re trying to decide how to accept or reject someone’s resignation letter, I have new samples of those as well.

All hardship letters (which cover mortgage, education, disability and more) and resignation letters (which cover transfers, promotions, education and more) are free to download and edit or copy and paste directly from the site.

Some of my other sites that are useful for similar issues include ApologyLetters.net with 211 apology letters, ComplaintLetters.net, with 172 complaint letters, and ThankYouLetters.ws with 140 thank you letters.

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