How to Get Strong Letters of Recommendation (LORs) for MS Abroad
Letters of Recommendation can make or break your MS application. Learn who to ask, what to include, and how to help your recommenders write powerful LORs for US, UK, and Canada programs.
Get Free AI Counselling →What Makes a Strong LOR?
A Letter of Recommendation (LOR) is a formal letter from someone who knows your academic or professional capabilities and can vouch for your potential for graduate-level study. Most MS programs require 2–3 LORs. A strong LOR is specific, enthusiastic, and provides concrete examples of your abilities — not just vague praise like "she is a hardworking student."
Who to Ask
Ideal recommenders: professors who supervised your thesis or project, research supervisors, internship managers, or professors in whose courses you scored well and participated actively. Avoid asking HODs or Principals who don't know you personally.
Academic vs Professional LORs
Most programs prefer 2 academic + 1 professional LOR. If you have work experience, a professional LOR from a manager who can speak to your technical and leadership skills is very valuable.
Help Your Recommender
Provide your recommender with: your CV, SOP draft, list of programs you're applying to, your key achievements in their course/project, and specific traits you'd like them to highlight. This dramatically improves LOR quality.
Timeline Management
Ask recommenders at least 6–8 weeks before deadlines. Send polite reminders 2 weeks and 1 week before deadlines. Never wait until the last week — rushed LORs are weak LORs.
LOR Red Flags — What to Avoid
| Red Flag | Why It Hurts | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Generic praise only ("good student") | Says nothing specific about you | Brief recommenders with specific examples to include |
| Same recommender for all 3 LORs | Shows narrow support network | Diversify — at least 2–3 different people |
| LOR from HOD who barely knows you | Admissions can tell it's hollow | Choose professors from projects, research, or small classes |
| Late submission | Application goes incomplete | Manage timelines strictly, set reminders |
| LOR contradicts your SOP narrative | Creates inconsistency in application | Share your SOP with recommenders for alignment |
Frequently Asked Questions
Many professors in India ask students to draft the LOR for them to review and sign. This is acceptable — but the LOR should genuinely reflect the professor's perspective. Write in first person from the professor's viewpoint, using specific details about your work in their class or project.
Most US, UK, and Canadian programs have online LOR portals where you enter your recommender's email. The university sends them a direct link to submit the LOR. You typically cannot see the LOR once submitted (confidential). Plan accordingly and confirm your recommender received the link.
Yes. AbroBot provides guidance on who to approach for LORs based on your profile, what each recommender should emphasize for specific programs, and a timeline management checklist. All 100% unbiased — we don't push any university for commission reasons.
Start Your Study Abroad Journey — 0% Commission, 100% Unbiased
Join thousands of Indian students who chose AbroBot.ai for transparent, AI-powered guidance.
Talk to AbroBot AI Free →