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This wikiHow teaches you how to create your own custom headers and footers in Microsoft Word. You can start with one of Word’s pre-made header and footer templates or start yours from scratch. Both headers and footers can include custom text, page numbers, images, and special formatting.
Things You Should Know
- Click Insert > Header or Footer > Edit Header or Edit Footer.
- Create your header. You can add page numbers, date, and logos. Then, hit Close Header & Footer to preview it on the document.
- Double click the header or footer to make edits or change the settings.
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Click the Insert tab. It’s at the top of Word.
- If you’ve already inserted a header or footer and want to edit it, simply double-click it now.
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Click Header or Footer. It’s in the «Header & Footer» panel at the top of Word. A menu will expand.
- On the menu, you’ll see different header and footer styles that you can use as a starting point—all are fully editable. You can select one of these now to add it to your document if you’d like. To edit the header or footer after placing it, just double-click it on the page.
- You can also browse more pre-made headers and footers by clicking More Headers from Office.com.
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Click Edit Header or Edit Footer. Depending on the option you selected, you’ll see the link at the bottom of the menu. This opens a Design tab in the toolbar that’s specifically for creating custom headers and footers.
- Every time you double-click a header or footer to edit it, the Design tab (Windows) or Header & Footer tab (Mac) will automatically open.
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Click Page Number to add page numbering. You can select from a number of numbering styles and locations from the menu.
- Click the Format Page Numbers menu to choose a different number format, such as roman numerals. You can also choose to add other numbering elements here, such as chapter numbers and headings.[1]
- Click the Format Page Numbers menu to choose a different number format, such as roman numerals. You can also choose to add other numbering elements here, such as chapter numbers and headings.[1]
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Add text to the header or footer. If you’d like to add specific text, such as your name, to the header or footer, you can easily type it at the desired location. If you chose one of Word’s pre-made header or footer templates, you can edit the placeholder text by clicking the text and typing over it.
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Insert other features into the header or footer. The «Insert» panel on the Design or Header & Footer tab contains a bunch of different features you can add to your header or footer:
- Date & Time: This allows you to select a date and/or time format to place in the header or footer.
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Document Info: Use this option to include certain information about your document in the header or footer, such as the document’s title, author name, and file path.[2]
- Quick Parts: Quick Parts are reusable text and properties that you can add to any part of your document, including headers and footers.
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Pictures or Online Pictures: You can use either of these options to place an image into your header or footer.[3]
For best results, stick to a small image, such as a decorative horizontal bar or logo.
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Click Close Header & Footer. It’s the red-and-white «X» icon on the far right side of the Design tab. This closes the header and footer editor, which shows you how it will really look on your document.
- If you added a header and want to add a footer as well (or vice-versa), return to the Insert tab and select Header or Footer as necessary.
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Double-click the header or footer. If you don’t want the header or footer you created to appear on the first page (or until a certain page you specify), use this method. Start by double-clicking the header or footer on the first page to open it for editing.
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Check the box next to «Different First Page.» It’s in the Options panel on the Design tab (PC) or Header & Footer tab (Mac), which opens automatically. This removes the header or footer from the first page, making the second page of your document the new Page 1.
- If you’d like, you can select Different Odd & Even Pages to place different headers/footers on even and odd pages. For example, if you want odd pages to contain the title of your document and even pages to display a page number.
- The Show Document Text option just toggles the actual text of your document on or off so can see what the header or footer looks like without the document.
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Click Close Header & Footer. It’s the red-and-white «X» icon on the far right side of the Design or Header & Footer tab. This saves your changes.
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Add New Question
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Question
How can I put my name in a footer on the left on every page and put the page number on the right, having it change on each page?
Malsha Ranawaka
Community Answer
There are pre-designed footers like this available. If this is not in your list, simply select a footer design that has two text fields on the left and right. Then go to «edit footer» mode and put the name on the left. Select the text field on the right. In the «Header & Footer Tools» tab, select «Quick Parts.» From the dropdown, select «Fields.» This will open a dialog box. Select «Page» from the field names list. Select a page number format and click «OK.» You will get an updating page number field on the right.
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Question
How do I insert a line above the footer?
Malsha Ranawaka
Community Answer
Go to Edit Footer, and place your cursor somewhere in the first line of words you have in the footer. Select the «Home» tab. In the «Paragraph» section, select the «Borders» dropdown. From the dropdown menu, select «Top Border», and you will get a border above the footer.
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Question
How do I edit a horizontal line in MS Word 2007?
Malsha Ranawaka
Community Answer
Double click on the line, or right click it and select «Format Horizontal Line» to get the dialog box with edit options.
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Browse through Microsoft Word’s collection of templates before you start adding your own header and footer to documents. The pre-set templates can save you a lot of time.
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About This Article
Article SummaryX
1. Click the Insert tab.
2. Click Header or Footer.
3. Click a header or filter option, or select Edit Header/Footer to start from scatch.
4. Click Page Number to add automatic numbering.
5. Add text.
6. Insert dates, document info, quick parts, and/or images.
7. Click Close Header & Footer.
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Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 324,489 times.
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Insert a header or footer
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Go to Insert > Header or Footer.
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Choose the header style you want to use.
Tip: Some built-in header and footer designs include page numbers.
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Add or change text for the header or footer. For more info on things you can do with headers, see Edit your existing headers and footers. To edit a header or footer that’s been already created, double-click on it.
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To eliminate a header—like deleting it on the title page—select it and then check the Different First Page box.
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Select Close Header and Footer or press Esc to exit.
To delete, select Insert > Header (or Footer) > Remove Header (or Remove Footer).
Add a standard or customized header or footer
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Go to Insert > Header or Footer.
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Choose from a list of standard headers or footers, go to the list of Header or Footer options, and select the header or footer that you want.
Or, create your own header or footer by selecting Edit Header or Edit Footer.
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When you’re done, select Close Header and Footer or press Esc.
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On the Layout tab, under View, click Page Layout.
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On the Layout tab, under Page Setup, click Header & Footer.
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Choose from a list of standard headers or footers by going to the Header or Footer pop-up menu, and clicking the header or footer that you want.
Or, create your own header or footer by clicking Customize Header or Customize Footer and following the instructions.
Note: When you customize your header or footer, you can add images, page numbers, date, time, sheet name, file name and path, and more.
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Go to Insert > Header & Footer.
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Add or header or footer text.
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Use the Options menu for additional customization.
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To exit, select Close Header and Footer or press Esc.
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To delete, select Insert > Header (or Footer) > Remove Header (or Remove Footer).
For more on headers and footers, see Headers and footers in Word.
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Word features a few built-in ways to change up your headers and footers in a document. For example, you can pretty easily have different headers and footers for odd and even pages, or you can have a different header and footer on the first page. To go beyond that, you’ll need to create multiple sections in your document, and learn how to link and unlink headers and footers from the preceding section.
For demonstration purposes, we’ve created a simple document that uses a plain text header with the words “How-To Geek” and a plain text footer with a page number (like in the image at the top of the article).
Note: We’re using Word 2016 for our examples in this article, but the techniques we’re talking about apply to pretty much any version of Word.
Create a Different Header and Footer on the First Page
One typical document convention is having a different header and footer on the first page of a document than shows up in the rest of the document. Perhaps you have a title page where you want no header or footer at all. Or, perhaps you want the first page footer to show some official disclaimer text for your company, and the footer in the rest of the document to show page numbers. Whatever your reason, Word makes this easy.
First, double-click anywhere in either the header or footer region of a page to make those regions active.
The header/footer region becomes active and you’ll see a new “Design” tab show up on your Ribbon with controls for dealing with headers and footers. On that tab, select the “Different First Page” option.
When you select that option, any text already in the header and footer on the first page is deleted. Also note that the name of the areas on the first page change to “First Page Header” and “First Page Footer.” You can leave them blank, or you can fill the spaces with other text that will not impact the headers and footers on subsequent pages at all.
Create Different Headers and Footers on Odd and Even Pages
Word also has a built-in option for creating different headers and footers for odd and even pages. By far, the most common use of this feature is to have page numbers appear at the outer edges of facing pages—the way you see it done in most books.
To do this, double-click anywhere in either the header or footer region of a page to make those regions active.
The header/footer region becomes active and you’ll see a new “Design” tab show up on your Ribbon with controls for dealing with headers and footers. On that tab, select the “Different Odd & Even Pages” option.
When you select that option, anything you have in the footers of even numbered pages is deleted. You can then put anything you want there, and align it however you like.
Create Different Headers and Footers for Different Sections of Your Document
Unfortunately, that’s where the easy control of headers and footers in Word ends. If you want to change headers and footers within the document any more than we’ve already covered, you’ll have to break your document into sections. There are all kinds of reasons you might want to do this. For example:
- You have some graphics or spreadsheets in your document that you want on landscape-oriented pages, when the rest of the document is portrait-oriented. You still want the headers and footers at the vertical top and bottom of the pages, though.
- You’re creating a long document with multiple chapters and don’t want headers and footers (or want them to look different) on the title pages of each chapter.
- You want to number some pages differently. For example, maybe you want your introduction and table of contents pages numbered with Roman numerals, but the main text of your document numbered with Arabic numerals.
Whatever your reasons, the trick is to create different sections where you want the headers and footers to look different. Personally, I find it easiest to think about the document ahead of time and create all the sections I need before I start populating the document. This often prevents the weird layout glitches you can get (and then have to resolve) when sectioning an already full document. That said, you can still create sections in an existing document, and the process is the same.
RELATED: How to Use Breaks in Microsoft Word to Better Format Your Documents
Place your cursor wherever you want to create a section break (typically this will be at the end of a page), and then switch to the “Layout” tab on the Ribbon. Click the “Breaks” button, and then choose the type of break you want. Usually, this is going to be a page break, so that’s what we’re using here.
Now, double-click the header or footer area on the page after the break you inserted. On the “Design” tab of the Ribbon, click the “Link to Previous” button to turn that option off. This breaks the link between the header or footer (whatever you have selected) of this section and the previous section. If you want to break the link for both the header and footer, you’ll need to do each one in turn this way.
Unlinking does not delete any existing text or images in the header or footer. You can remove, modify, or replace what’s already in your header or footer, and your changes will not impact the headers and footers in the previous section.
If you decide to reestablish a link to a previous sections header or footer, though, that action is destructive. When you relink sections, the header and footer in the active section is removed and replaced with whatever’s in the previous section. To do it, just double-click the header or footer on the page after the break. On the “Design” tab of the Ribbon, click the “Link to Previous” button to turn that option back on.
Word warns you that you’ll be deleting the current header or footer, and replacing it with the header or footer from the previous section. Click “Yes” to make it happen.
And just like that, your header or footer is reconnected to the previous section. Just remember that you’ll have to link or unlink both the header and footer as separate actions.
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How to Add Advanced Headers and Footers in Word
Create different sections to apply different document headers and footers
Updated on August 4, 2021
What to Know
- Double-click the top or bottom margin of a section. Anything added to the field appears as a header or footer on subsequent pages.
- For advanced settings, select Insert. In Header and Footer, choose the Header or Footer drop-down menu and select your options.
- Headers and footers can be applied per section. To create a new section, go to desired spot in document and choose Insert > Break.
Microsoft Word provides advanced header and footer options for lengthy or complicated documents. In this guide, we show you how to add headers and footers, as well as how to add section breaks, page numbers, dates, times, and other information using Microsoft Word for Mac (2012 through 2019) and Microsoft Word Online.
Add Headers and Footers
The easiest way to insert a header or footer is to place the mouse pointer in the top or bottom margin of a section and double-click to open the Header and Footer workspace. Anything you add to this workspace appears on every page of the section. To return to the body of your document, double-click anywhere in it.
You can format the header and footer text, for example, with a different font or bold text, and insert an image, such as a logo.
Add a Heading or Footer From the Word Ribbon
You can also use the Microsoft Word ribbon to add a header or footer. The benefit of this method is that the options are preformatted. Microsoft Word provides headers and footers with colored dividing lines, document title placeholders, date placeholders, page number placeholders, and other elements. Using one of these preformatted styles can save time and add a touch of professionalism to your documents. Here’s how:
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Click the Insert tab.
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In the Header and Footer section, click the Header or Footer drop-down arrow.
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Select the desired option.
Blank creates a blank header or footer, into which you can insert whatever text or graphics you like.
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The Header & Footer tab appears.
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Click Close Header and Footer to return to the main body of the document.
Unlink Headers and Footers From Previous Sections
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Click anywhere in the header or footer.
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Go to the Header & Footer tab, then click Link To Previous to turn off the link.
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Type a new header or footer for this section. Now unlinked, it functions independently of the previous ones.
Add Section Breaks in Microsoft Word
Sections are parts of a document. Use sections to organize content into chapters, topics, or whatever other division helps your reader understand and use the document. Each section in a Word document can have its own formatting, page layouts, columns, headers, and footers.
Sections are created using section breaks. To use headers and footers, insert a section break at the beginning of each section for which you want to apply a unique header or footer. The formatting you set up extends to each page of the section until another section break is encountered.
To set up a section break:
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Navigate to the spot where you want to create the break and select Insert > Break. Alternatively, click Layout > Breaks.
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Select the type of break you want.
- Section Break (Next Page): The section starts on a new page.
- Section Break (Continuous): The section continues from the selected spot.
- Section Break (Odd Page): Starts a new section on the next odd-numbered page.
- Section Break (Even Page): Starts a new section on the next even-numbered page.
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Section breaks aren’t visible by default. To see section breaks, go to the Home tab and click the section symbol.
After your document is divided into sections, you can apply headers and footers on a per-section basis.
Use headers and footers without inserting section breaks to use the same headers and footers throughout the document.
Include Page Numbers, Dates, Times, or Other Info
Word offers many options for including information automatically. For example, to insert page numbers:
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Go to the Header & Footer tab, then click Insert > Page Number.
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Click Format Page Numbers and select the appropriate settings. For example, select the Include Chapter Number check box if you formatted your document with Styles. To change the starting number, click the up or down arrow. Then, click OK.
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To add the date or time, go to the Header & Footer tab and select Date & Time. Choose a date format in the dialog box that appears and click Update automatically so that the current date and time always display in the document.
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