The last lines of your cover letter are the ones a hiring manager reads right before they decide what to do next. A strong ending does three things in a few sentences: it restates why you are a fit, it asks for the interview, and it thanks the reader, followed by a professional sign-off. A weak one trails off with "I hope to hear from you soon" and leaves the next move to chance.
This guide shows you exactly how to end a cover letter: what the closing paragraph should contain, the best sign-offs to use (and the ones to avoid), and ready-to-adapt examples for different situations. Get the last 40 words right and you leave the reader with momentum instead of a shrug.

