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4 Key Parts Every Essay Introduction Needs (With Examples)

Every essay introduction needs four parts if you want full marks: a clear topic sentence, a little background, a thesis statement, and signpost sentences. That’s it.

The topic sentence introduces your essay, the background gives a little context, the thesis statement tells the reader your perspective (or opinion), and the signposts show what’s coming up in your body paragraphs. If you can write these four parts, you’ll always have a strong essay introduction structure that gets you great marks (and makes the rest of your essay easier to write).

Here’s exactly how to write each one, with examples you can use as templates. I’ve used an argumentative essay (the most common type you’ll write at university) for the examples, but you can read more about the different essay types here.

You can also watch my video on how to write an essay introduction here:

1. Topic Sentence

Your first sentence should do two things: introduce the topic and hook the reader. Think of it like the headline or title of your essay, short, direct, and impossible to misunderstand.The hook part can seem a bit intimidating but I like to choose a style of hook first:

  • Interesting Question: Best for argumentative or exploratory essays.
    Example: “How will renewable energy reshape global economies in the next 50 years?”
  • Surprising Statistic or Fact: Works well in expository, research, or scientific essays.
    Example: “Solar power now provides more new electricity than any other energy source worldwide (IEA, 2022).”
  • Bold Statement: Great for argumentative essays where you need to take a position.
    Example: “Fossil fuels are no longer a sustainable option for meeting society’s energy needs.”
  • Anecdote: Best for narrative or reflective essays.
    Example: “When my family switched to solar power, our electricity bill dropped by half within months.”
  • Definition Hook: Useful for expository, analytical, argumentative, or even compare and contrast essays.
    Example: “Renewable energy is defined as power derived from resources that replenish naturally, such as sunlight or wind.”
  • Quotation Hook: These are strong for argumentative or reflective essays, but aren’t used very often.
    Example: “‘The future is green energy, sustainability, renewable energy’ (Arnold Schwarzenegger).”

Don’t stress about making your hook “perfect”, it’s just about making your first sentence interesting as opposed to “Solar power is an energy source used around the world” (…snore).

Don’t overload your essay topic (or hook) sentence with details, examples, or opinions. These all come later in your body paragraphs.

2. Background or Context

Once you’ve introduced the topic, add one or two sentences of background. Background or context is where you explain the surrounding circumstances or important information on your topic. It’s important because it gives your reader some information so they can understand the topic, without them having to read a lot of detail (which you’re saving for your body paragraphs). It helps to choose the type of information first, which I find depends on both your essay type and topic, but here’s what I recommend:

  • Define key terms: Perfect for expository or analytical essays.
    Example: “Renewable energy refers to power from naturally replenished sources such as sun, wind, or water.”
  • Outline historical events or developments: Great for compare and contrast, reflective or argumentative essays especially when you’re showing change or growth through time.
    Example: “The first practical solar cells were developed in 1954.”
  • Note current events or issues: Good for argumentative or persuasive essays, and can be helpful in narratives.
    Example: “Global investment in solar energy reached record highs in 2022.”
  • Highlight important theories or previous studies: Ideal for research or literature review essays to show your essay builds on established work. But also useful for descriptive ones.
    Example: “Studies consistently link renewable energy adoption with reduced greenhouse gas emissions.”

Keep your background sentences short. The last thing you want to do is pack too much detail in, such as examples, data or quotes. You want to keep those important points for the body section (where they belong).

3. Thesis Statement

This is the most important sentence in your entire essay. Your thesis statement tells the reader exactly what your essay will focus on, and it’s usually worth a lot of marks. I recommend using this formula to write your thesis statement (you can word it however you like, but this will get you started and make sure that you have the important parts in it):

Formula:
Thesis statement = [your topic + your perspective] because [reason 1], [reason 2], [reason 3].

It also means your thesis statement is clear, opinionated, and gives your reader a roadmap of what’s coming up.

The tone of your thesis matters. Positive or negative language immediately tells the person reading and marking your essay which direction you’re going in (then you just have to make sure the rest of your essay matches that positive, neutral or negative tone).

4. Signpost Sentences

Finally, we’ve made it to the end of the introduction. This is where we write about what’s coming up in next. “Signpost” sentences state what each of your body paragraphs will be about and in what order, so it’s how you show the structure of your essay (think of them like a mini-map for your marker). they also make writing your essay so much easier.

The easiest way to write your signpost sentences is to use one sentence for each body paragraph that you will have. Of course, you can combine them if you want to write fewer sentences instead:

  • Longer essays (3,000 – 5,000+ words): More detail in your signposts = easier to understand and structure.
  • Argumentative essays: Spell out each main argument in a separate signpost sentence.
  • Expository essays: A single condensed signpost sentence usually works best.

Your signpost sentences should ultimately either:

  • Provide Direction: highlight what to expect next.
  • Highlight Key Points: They draw attention to important information, comparisons, or conclusions within the content. 
  • Connect Ideas: They help show how each body paragraph is related to the other and to the overall topic.
  • Indicate Transitions: Shows how you will move from one idea or body paragraph to another.

Why This Essay Introduction Structure Works

An introduction with these four parts does three things:

  1. Makes it clear: Your lecturer knows exactly what your essay is about.
  2. Structure: You show you’ve planned your essay before writing it.
  3. Gets you marks: You tick every box the marking rubric is looking for.

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