if you are addressing someone you love, say very truly yours. If you are addressing anyone else, best regards.
Best regards, Regards, Yours truly, Yours faithfully, Sincerely, Respectfully,
You can end a letter with a closing phrase like "Sincerely," "Best regards," or "Yours truly," followed by your signature.
You can sign off a letter to an editor with "Sincerely," "Best regards," or "Yours truly," followed by your name.
The most common closing terms are: Sincerely Yours Truly Yours Sincerely Regards Some slightly more personal closing terms are: Best Regards Cordially Yours Respectfully The most appropriate closing is a term that you feel comfortable with.
People can close a business letter by leaving their contact information. People can also thank the business for their help or information.
1) Yours truly
Sincerely, Yours truly, Best Regards, Earnestly, Respectfully, Genuinely, Cordially, ...etc.
"Best regards" is a common way to end a letter or email. It is commonly used as a polite way to end a letter with someone you already know, and is less formal than "Yours Sincerely".
In a formal letter, if you don't know the person's name you should start "Dear Sir or Madam" and finish "Yours faithfully". If you know the surname it's "Dear Mr Brown" or "Dear Ms Brown" (some people still make a distinction between Miss and Mrs, but it's going out of date.) The traditional ending here is "Yours sincerely"
to end a perfect letter you could write sincerely, sincerely yours, very sincerely, or very sincerely yours
More correctly you should use 'yours faithfully' as the closing salutation
You normally use best regards in letters when you are speaking in business, but do not want to sound to formal. It's a more easy going way of saying "Yours Sincerely".