npmuzei.org
General100% FreeNo signup

Apology Generator

Apology Generator — empathy coach. 100% free, no signup, no credit card.

Share:
Conversation
Empty — type your first prompt below

Start the conversation

Type your prompt in the box below and hit Send. The response streams here. Send follow-ups to refine — your chat keeps context for up to 10 turns this session.

Enter send · Shift+Enter newline10 turns left

About Apology Generator

Apology Generator drafts a sincere, well-structured apology that owns the mistake, expresses understanding of the impact, and commits to specific change. Use it for personal apologies to a friend, professional apologies to a client, or public statements when something went wrong.

Who this tool is for

  • Professionals apologizing to clients after a missed deadline or quality issue
  • Founders writing public apology statements after a product outage or security incident
  • Friends and partners drafting personal apologies for serious mistakes
  • Customer service teams responding to escalated complaints in writing
  • Anyone who knows they need to apologize and is freezing up on how to start

Real use cases

  • Write a client apology after missing a deadline that affected their launch
  • Draft a public statement after a privacy breach for the company blog and Twitter
  • Compose a personal apology to a friend after a thoughtless comment at dinner
  • Send a refund-and-apology email after a damaged product reached a customer
  • Write a corrective apology when a previous "apology" did more harm than good

How to use Apology Generator

  • In situation, describe what happened plainly: "missed the deadline by 8 days on the rebrand deliverable"
  • In impact, list how the other party was affected — be honest, not minimizing
  • Pick the medium: Email, Text Message, Letter, Public Statement, In Person Script
  • Specify the relationship: Client, Boss, Romantic Partner, Friend, Family, Public/Customer
  • Add the commitment to change — what you will do differently — so the apology has substance

Tips for better results

  • A real apology has three parts: acknowledge what you did, name the impact, commit to specific change. "Sorry if you felt..." is not an apology — it shifts blame
  • For serious apologies, do not promise something you cannot deliver. Specificity matters ("I will set a calendar alert for every milestone") more than grand promises
  • For public apologies, the worst thing is to apologize then immediately defend — pick one. Defense belongs in a separate later message

Frequently asked questions

Should I send it as written, or use it as a starting point?

Use it as a starting point. Add at least one personal detail only you would know — that is what makes it feel real, not templated.

How long should the apology be?

For text or short email, 2–3 sentences. For a serious offense, half a page. Public statements: as short as possible while owning everything. Long apologies feel like deflection.

What if the other person does not accept it?

An apology is something you offer; it is not a transaction. Let the other person have their reaction. Do not follow up demanding acceptance — that undoes the apology.

Should I apologize in writing or in person?

In person for personal relationships when possible — tone and presence matter. Writing works for professional settings and when in-person would put the other person on the spot.

Related free tools

More from General — every tool is free.

View all General tools →