Professional Argument Essay Writing Service

Argument essay = take a position and back it with evidence. We write yours with a clear thesis, solid structure, and real support. Any topic, any deadline.

What an argument essay is

An argument essay (or argumentative essay) states a clear position and defends it with reasons and evidence. The reader should follow your logic and see how you address counterarguments. We keep the structure tight: intro with thesis, body paragraphs with one main point each, and a conclusion that reinforces your position. Different from persuasive, which can lean on emotion — argument leans on evidence and reasoning.

Structure we use

Introduction: Hook, context, and a clear thesis that states your claim. Body: Each paragraph covers one reason or piece of evidence; we often include a paragraph that acknowledges and rebuts the main counterargument. Conclusion: Restate the thesis, summarize the main points, and end with a closing thought. Citations (APA, MLA, or your style) are included when required.

Example topics

We’ve written argument essays on topics such as: climate policy, social media and mental health, school uniforms, minimum wage, gun control, college tuition, automation and jobs, and many more. If your instructor gave a prompt or a list of topics, paste it in the order form. Need ideas? See our essay topics page.

Tips for a strong argument essay

  • Choose a debatable claim — something people can disagree about.
  • Support each point with evidence (studies, examples, statistics).
  • Address the other side fairly, then explain why your view is stronger.
  • Keep a formal, academic tone.

How we can help

Send your topic or question. We assign a writer who knows the subject and can argue clearly. You get an original argumentative essay, with citations if needed. Essay examples and persuasive essays are different — we match the type to your assignment.

Why argument essays matter in school

Teachers assign argument essays to see if you can take a stand and back it up. They want clear thinking, not just opinion. A good argument essay shows you can find evidence, organize it, and answer the other side. That skill matters in college and beyond — in reports, proposals, and any job where you have to convince people with reasons.

We don't just hand you a finished essay. We follow your prompt and your level. If the assignment asks for three reasons and a counterargument paragraph, we do that. If it asks for APA or MLA, we format it. You get something you can turn in and learn from.

Common mistakes we avoid

Weak argument essays usually fail for a few reasons. We steer clear of all of them.

  • Vague thesis. "Social media is bad" is too broad. We narrow it: e.g. "Social media use over two hours a day is linked to higher anxiety in teens."
  • No real evidence. We use studies, stats, or clear examples — not just "many people say" or "everyone knows."
  • Ignoring the other side. If you don't mention counterarguments, the essay feels one-sided. We add a paragraph that states the opposite view and then explains why our position holds.
  • Emotional overload. Argument essays need logic first. We keep tone academic; we don't rely on guilt or hype.
  • Messy structure. One idea per paragraph, clear topic sentences, transitions. We follow that so the reader can follow you.

What happens when you order an argument essay

You fill out the order form: type "Essay" or "Argument essay," page count, deadline, academic level. In the instructions you paste the topic or the full prompt. If the teacher gave a list of sources to use, add that too. We show the price; you pay. Within a short time we assign a writer who has done similar work.

The writer drafts the essay from scratch. They build a thesis, outline the main reasons, find or use the evidence you need, and add a counterargument section if the prompt requires it. Citations go in the style you chose (APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.). You get the file by the deadline. If something is off — wrong focus, missing point — you ask for a revision. We don't charge extra for that.

Argument vs persuasive: when to use which

Sometimes the prompt says "argumentative," sometimes "persuasive." The line isn't always sharp, but in practice: argumentative leans on evidence and logic; you're making a case. Persuasive can use more emotion and direct appeal to the reader. Many high school and college assignments want argumentative — they want you to argue with evidence. If your prompt says "persuasive," we can lean that way; if it says "argumentative" or "argument," we stick to evidence and structure. When in doubt, paste the prompt and we'll match it.

How long should an argument essay be?

It depends on the assignment. High school might ask for 500–800 words or 2–3 pages. College often wants 1000–1500 words or 4–6 pages. Some courses ask for 2000+ words. You tell us the required length (pages or word count) and we hit it. We don't pad with fluff; we don't cut corners. Each paragraph earns its place.

FAQ about argument essays

Can you write an argument essay on any topic? Yes, as long as it's something we can research and argue. We've done politics, health, education, tech, environment, society. If the topic is very niche (e.g. a local policy or a specific course reading), send the materials so we can match a writer who gets it.

Do you include a counterargument? If your prompt asks for it, yes. Many instructors want one paragraph that states the opposite view and then refutes it. We do that by default for argument essays unless you say otherwise.

What if I already have a thesis? Paste it in the instructions. We'll build the essay around it and make sure the body supports it.

Can you use my sources? Yes. List them in the instructions. We'll cite them correctly and work them into the argument.

Is the essay plagiarism-free? Yes. Every essay is written from scratch for your order. We run plagiarism checks and can send you a report on request. See plagiarism-free essays for details.

Sample outline (what we build)

Here's the kind of outline we work from. Intro: hook (question or fact), context in one or two sentences, thesis (your main claim). Body paragraph 1: first reason or piece of evidence, with support. Body paragraph 2: second reason or evidence. Body paragraph 3: counterargument (what the other side says) and your rebuttal. Conclusion: restate thesis in different words, sum up the three points, closing sentence. We don't hand in outlines — we turn this into full paragraphs with transitions and citations. But if you want to see an outline before the full essay, say so in the instructions and we can provide a short one.

Research and sources

If your assignment requires sources, we find and cite them. We use academic or reliable sources (journals, books, reputable sites) unless the prompt says otherwise. We cite in the style you choose: APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard. If you have a list of sources you must use, paste it in the instructions and we'll work them in. We don't invent studies or fake quotes. Every citation in the essay points to a real source.

What your teacher is actually grading

When they read an argument essay they're looking for: a thesis they can find in the first paragraph, body paragraphs that each advance one clear reason, evidence that backs the reason (not just "experts say"), and a counterargument that's taken seriously and then answered. If any of that's missing, the grade drops. We build all four into the draft so the reader doesn't have to hunt for your position or your proof.

Thesis before and after

Weak: "Social media has effects on people." Strong: "Heavy social media use is linked to higher anxiety and lower sleep quality in teenagers, so schools should treat it as a health issue." Weak: "Climate change is a problem." Strong: "Carbon taxes are the most cost-effective way to cut emissions in the next decade." We push your topic toward the second kind — one clear claim the whole essay can support. If you already have a thesis, we keep it and make sure every paragraph serves it.

Transitions that keep the argument moving

Between reasons we use phrases like "Furthermore," "A second reason," "In addition." Before the counterargument: "Some argue that..." or "Critics claim that...." After the rebuttal: "Therefore," "Thus," or a short sentence that brings the reader back to your thesis. We don't overuse them — one per paragraph is enough. The goal is that the reader always knows where they are: reason one, reason two, the other side, your answer, conclusion.

Length and depth

Short argument essays (2–3 pages) need a tight thesis and two or three reasons; we don't pad. Longer ones (5+ pages) can add more evidence per reason or an extra counterargument. You tell us the required length and we fill it with argument, not filler. If the rubric says "use at least three sources," we do that and cite them. If it says "no outside sources," we stick to the materials you provide.

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