Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. How tos

How to add page numbers in Microsoft Word

Add as a preferred source on Google
Microsoft Word purchase page on a MacBook.
Digital Trends

Adding page numbers to Word documents is a great way to better organize them as they grow longer, and especially if you print it all out. What if you dropped all that paperwork and it went out of order?! Page numbers to the rescue! Here's how to add page numbers to Word in a few different ways.

Looking for more general tips on how to make the most of Word? Check out our beginner's guide to Word.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • Microsoft Word

  • PC

Adding page numbers

Page numbers can be added to the header (top), the footer (bottom), the margins, and a few other places depending on your preferences. You also have the option to apply different styles, as well as the ability to adjust the appearance of the page number itself.

Step 1: Select the Insert tab located at the top row next to Home.

Step 2: Select the Page Number button and choose exactly where you want it to be displayed within the document. You can choose from several options: Top of Page and Bottom of Page are the most common choices. The Page Margins option will place it within the side of your choosing, while Current Position will implement it to wherever your mouse pointer is situated.

The Page Number menu in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 3: After you’ve selected the location of the page number, select a style of your liking. Now click the Close Header and Footer button at the top, or double-click anywhere on the main body of the Word document.

A page number will now be automatically added to every page of your Microsoft Word document.

Other customization options

Step 1: Formatting page numbers: Select the Insert tab, followed by the Page Number button. Instead of selecting where you want to add the numbers, though, instead select the the Format Page Number menu. You’ll be greeted with various formatting choices, including the number format, chapter numbers, as well as page numbering.

The Format Page Numbers location and associated options on Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: Customize the appearance of page numbers: Double-click wherever your page number has been added to. Highlight the page number by double-clicking on it. Now go to the Home tab, after which you can change the font, style, size, and color. You can also apply different positioning for the page number.

The options to customize the appearance of page numbers in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 3: To remove page numbers: Select the Page Number tab within Insert. Below the Format Page Numbers field, select Remove Page Numbers.

The Remove Page Number tab used for removing a page number for a Microsoft Word document.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Starting page numbers from page 2

If the first page of your document has an index, an introductory image, cover, etc., you might want the page numbers to start from a page other than the first. Here's how to do that.

Step 1: Double click the area where you placed the page number (header or footer) on the first page or select Insert > Header or Footer > Edit Header or Edit Footer. Inside the Design tab that is now displayed within Header & Footer Tools, select the Different First Page button. Click Close Header and Footer.

The Different First Page box in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: Select the second page, then select the Insert tab, choose Page Number, and Format Page Numbers. Within the Start at box, enter 0. Select OK.

Setting the Start at box value to 0 so the page number commences on the second page in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 3: The Insert tab should still be opened. Select the Page Number menu. Finally, select where you want to place the page number and a style.

The page number starting from page 2 in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Starting page numbers on a specific page

If you don’t want the page number to start from the first page in your document, you can start page numbers on a specific page in Word with the following process.

Step 1: If you want your page number to start from, say, page four, click or tap anywhere on page three. Now select the Page Layout tab, select Breaks, and choose the Next Page button.

The Next Page box located within Breaks on Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 2: The entry field should automatically be moved to the fourth page. If not, select that page manually. Now head to the Insert tab, click Page Numbers, and add where you want to input the page number.

Step 3: By default, the page number will now be highlighted. The Link to Previous field will already be selected at the top panel. Click that button to deselect it.

The Link to Previous box in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: The page number will still be highlighted by default. Now go to the Page Number menu within Insert and select Format Page Numbers. On the Page Numbering field, select Start at. This should automatically enter "1" in the box. If it doesn’t, input the number "1" into it yourself. Select OK.

You will now see the page you’ve selected to start your page numbering from will showcase the number 1. In this case, the fourth page will have the page number set as 1. The 5th page will now have the page number set as 2 and so on and so forth.

The Start at box within Page Number Format in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 5: The footer sections will still be opened for editing. On the previous page, highlight the page number (in this case, the third page will have the number 3) and delete it, after which all previous page numbers before that specific page will be automatically removed.

Deleting a page number from the footer in Microsoft Word.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

How do I remove the page number from a specific page?

To remove a specific page's number, select the page, then navigate to Insert > Page Number and select Remove Page Numbers.

If you find that the "Remove Page Numbers" option isn't available, or is grayed out, double click/tap the header or footer location of the number and then try again.

How do I show total page numbers in Word?

If you want to show the current page number and the total number of pages, you can do so when adding the page numbers to your document. After selecting Insert > Page Numbers, and choosing your location, you'll be presented with a number of style options.

Find the subheading "Page X of Y" and select the style of number you want within that subsection. It will then display the current page number and the total number of pages, as "Page X of Y."

Organizing page numbers in Microsoft Word is straightforward, and they can be positioned in the header or the footer, and styled appropriately. Whether you have page numbers displayed or not, inserting a table of contents will still work, although it might be tricky for the reader to find the right page.

Note that if you delete a page from the Word document, the page numbers will automatically update to accommodate this.

Zak Islam
Former Contributor
Zak covers the latest news in the technology world, particularly the computing field. A fan of anything pertaining to tech…
How to change the default apps on a Mac
Apple's default apps are great, until they're not. Here's how to swap them out in seconds.
change default apps on Mac featured image

One of my favorite things about macOS is that it comes with default apps to handle your everyday tasks. You get Safari to browse the web, the Mail app to handle your emails, and the Preview app to open and view photos and PDFs.

But what if you want to use a third-party app you prefer over the default app? Thankfully, Apple makes it easy to change the default apps on your Mac. So, whether you want to use Google Chrome or Outlook, here’s how you can set them as the default on your Mac. 

Read more
You can now choose how hard Claude thinks before answering your queries
For the first time, Claude users can decide whether their AI assistant thinks fast or thinks deep.
Page, Text, Business Card

Anthropic just released Claude Opus 4.8, and while the benchmark improvements are quite real, the most meaningful change for everyday users is something far simpler. 

You can now tell Claude how hard to think before it responds to your query. Along with that, dynamic workflows are now available in research preview for Enterprise, Team, and Max plan users. 

Read more
Copilot gets a redesign and it now wants to do more without being an eyesore
Microslop Microsoft AI Copilot logo

Microsoft is giving Copilot a quiet but meaningful redesign, and this time the focus is not just on making it more powerful. It is about making it feel like something that naturally belongs in your workflow.

Across Microsoft 365, Copilot is being reshaped to reduce visual noise and increase usefulness. Instead of constantly demanding attention, it is being designed to sit in the background when needed and step forward only when it actually helps. That shift might sound subtle, but in day-to-day work, it changes how often you feel interrupted versus supported.

Read more