Dr. Kara Abdolmaleki, PhD · TESL Canada · Certified CELPIP Instructor L1
Email task CLB 6 emailinformalCLB 6socialgratitude

Thank-you email to a host family (CLB 6)

Task prompt

You recently stayed with a Canadian host family for two weeks while taking a language course. Write an email to thank them, mention two specific things you enjoyed about your stay, and invite them to visit you in your home country.

Your task

Write an informal thank-you email to a host family. Your email must:

  • Thank them warmly and sincerely
  • Mention two specific things you enjoyed
  • Invite them to visit you
  • Use a friendly, natural tone

Word count target: 90–120 words


Model answer (CLB 6)

Subject: Thank You for Everything!

Dear Mr. and Mrs. Patel,

I wanted to write to say thank you for the wonderful two weeks I spent at your home. I truly enjoyed my stay and I already miss your cooking! The homemade dal you made on my first night was delicious, and I will never forget it.

I also really enjoyed our evening walks along the river. Those conversations helped me improve my English a lot and made me feel very welcome in Canada.

I hope you will visit me in Brazil one day. I would love to show you my city and return your kindness.

With warm wishes, Felipe Carvalho


Why this scores CLB 6

CLB CriterionWhat this response does well
PurposeWarm thanks, two specific memories, invitation — all included
DetailNamed dish, named activity, mentioned English improvement
OrganizationOpening thanks → two memories → invitation → close
ToneFriendly, genuine, appropriately informal
VocabularySimple but natural; “truly enjoyed,” “return your kindness”
GrammarMostly accurate, natural voice, minor complexity present

Common mistakes at CLB 4–5

Weak versionWhy it loses marks
”Thank you. I liked your house. Come visit.”No specific memories — feels impersonal
Only one specific thing mentionedPrompt says “two things” — completeness matters at every level
Overly formal languageThis is an informal email — “I am most grateful for your hospitality” sounds unnatural
No invitationThe third required element; omitting it loses task marks

Examiner tip

Informal emails often feel easier but test-takers lose marks by being too vague. “I enjoyed everything” or “you were so kind” scores lower than naming a specific dish, walk, conversation, or activity. At any CLB level, specific details are the difference between a passing and a strong response. Write as if the person reading your email can picture exactly what you are describing.

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