How-To

How to Change the Font of an Entire Document in Microsoft Word

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Here is how to quickly change the font or format of your entire Word document.

So you have your document written out, but you don’t like the way it looks. No problem. Changing the font of the entire document in Microsoft Word is easy and can be done in a few simple steps. If you are using Open Office, Google Docs, or another alternative, the process is very similar. Once you learn how to do it with a one-word processing program, you can pretty much do it in all of them.

Change Font of an Entire Microsoft Word Doc

First, select all of the text in the document. To do that, just use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + A on your keyboard. Or, if you don’t like using keyboard shortcuts, select the Home tab on the Ribbon and from the “Editing” section, click Select > Select All.

All of the text in your document should now be selected and highlighted. With this done, you can edit the entire document at once.

On the Home ribbon, you’ll find everything you need under the “Font” heading.

Click the wide font box to display a list of fonts. From this list, you can hover the mouse over a font to preview it or click it to change the text to that font.  You can also adjust boldness, italics, color, size, and underline.

But, manually adjusting the font might not be the easiest or the fastest way to make your document look great. The first thing you should try is styles; I’ll show you where they are below.

Word Document Styles

Alternatively, you can use the “Styles” menu from the Home tab to select pre-made font sets. A style will automatically adjust the color and font of your document. It also applies different values to headings, titles, and other special text.

With a pre-made style, you can change the look of your entire document to something professional and appropriate with a click of the mouse.

Styles allow you to quickly apply a set of formatting choices consistently throughout your document.

14 Comments

14 Comments

  1. David

    October 17, 2011 at 1:17 pm

    I have been doing this for as long as I’ve used MS Word (since the 1980s). However, I can’t seem to make it so that font I’ve assigned sticks.

    First, after having selected all, applied the font size and type (in this case Ariel 10), and saved, when I select all again, I see that the Font window shows a blank instead of showing the font I used. I take this to mean that somewhere in the document, it’s not Ariel 10.

    Second, in the middle of moving things around, sure enough some other font starts appearing. It often happens when I get rid of a paragraph marker, so I think it’s somewhere in the paragraph-level formatting.

    Is there a way to do the select-all/format/save thing (meme? riff?) such that Word knows that I really mean it?

    TIA,
    David

    • Dee

      September 10, 2015 at 11:21 pm

      I was having the same issue as David above where the font I selected did not stick and the fonts section stayed blank. I am aware it is a few years on since the question was posted but I thought the answer would benefit someone else as I found a solution which worked for me.

      Select the all the text requiring font change – Go to the Toolbar – Select format – Go to Font – Change the font.

      This worked for me :)

      Good luck!

      D

    • Jen

      April 15, 2016 at 10:47 am

      same problem. This shouldn’t be so difficult.

      • LK

        September 30, 2018 at 11:59 am

        Same problem. I select the whole document and choose a font – tried this in numerous docx files – but it simply doesn’t work. A mishmash of fonts remains.

        • Gillian M Dale

          September 12, 2021 at 9:00 pm

          I was having this problem. I finally got it into all one font and size, but the spacing was off in parts that had included some i had pasted from elsewhere. What finally got it to all look the same was to highlight the misfit section, go to STYLES and click on the first one, and presto, they then all looked the same. i hope this helps someone as i thought i was going to go nuts with frustration.

  2. Robert Elsner

    March 22, 2013 at 12:58 pm

    I’m trying to convert a file to font GENEVA. Can’t find it. Suggestions?
    Thanks!

  3. Steve

    August 23, 2013 at 9:46 am

    This doesn’t change the fonts used in a numbered list. Is there a way to change ALL fonts to a single font, including those in numbered lists?

    • hou

      September 13, 2013 at 6:16 pm

      I would like to automatically convert the font of a text that I insert into an existing document.

      Thank you

  4. Helen

    August 30, 2014 at 1:45 pm

    I know how to change the font, but I want to change the size after I have already chosen a letter template. Nothing I am doing is working. Can you help?

  5. ibrahim shaikh

    October 29, 2015 at 5:00 am

    when i typing in the word 2007 that time work is go on good but I’m close the word file then open the word file font is change and more than spacing leave so how to this problem solve???????????????? please give me the answer…….

  6. Elaine

    January 24, 2016 at 5:26 am

    hi! I was wondering can you tell me how to make the font look bigger without changing the font size. i really appreciate it if you answer it within this week thanks! :)

  7. Gilbert Fitzsimmons

    December 23, 2016 at 5:41 am

    For several years, once I created a document I would change the font to an “8”. This worked until this morning, 12.23.16 when I noticed that the font has been changed to a “14”. The program will not allow a change from this “14” to an “8”. How can this be done?

  8. piecevcake

    December 2, 2018 at 12:42 pm

    Yes thats because you need to change NORMAL STYLE in the document which will change all the styles based on it. Including headers and footers.

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