Learning how to use Microsoft Word opens the door to writing letters, resumes, reports, and just about any document you can imagine. Word is the most popular word processor in the world, and while it packs hundreds of features, the everyday tasks are easy to master. Once you know how to type, format, and save a document, you have most of what you will ever need for school, work, and personal projects.
This beginner’s guide walks through the essentials without jargon: creating a new document, formatting text so it looks polished, adding images and lists, using styles for headings, and saving and printing your work. Whether you are on the desktop app, Word for the web, or the mobile app, the core steps are the same, and you will be creating professional documents in no time.
Getting to Know the Word Screen
When you open Word, the large white area is your page, where you type. Across the top sits the Ribbon, a toolbar split into tabs like Home, Insert, Layout, and Review. The Home tab holds your most-used tools: fonts, sizes, bold and italic, alignment, and lists. A blinking line called the cursor shows where your text will appear. At the very top is the Quick Access Toolbar with Save and Undo, and the File menu (sometimes called Backstage) is where you open, save, and print documents.
How to Create and Format a Document
These steps take you from a blank page to a finished, formatted document.
- Open a new document. Launch Word and click “Blank document,” or choose a template such as a resume or flyer from the start screen.
- Start typing. Click the page and type. Press Enter to start a new paragraph and let the text wrap automatically at the edge of the page.
- Format your text. Highlight words, then use the Home tab to change the font, size, color, and to apply bold, italic, or underline.
- Align and space. Use the alignment buttons to center or justify text, and set line spacing so your document is easy to read.
- Add lists. Click the bullet or numbered list buttons to organize points clearly, which is ideal for steps or key takeaways.
- Insert extras. Use the Insert tab to add pictures, tables, page numbers, or a header and footer.
- Save your work. Press Ctrl+S, pick a location like OneDrive or your PC, name the file, and save. Word for the web saves automatically.
Using Styles for Professional Documents
Styles are one of Word’s most powerful yet underused features. Instead of manually formatting each heading, apply a built-in style from the Home tab, such as Heading 1 for main sections and Heading 2 for subsections. Styles keep your formatting consistent, and they let Word build an automatic table of contents and a navigation pane you can open from the View tab. Using styles from the start saves enormous time on longer documents.
Adding Images and Tables
To insert a picture, go to the Insert tab, click Pictures, and choose a file from your computer or an online source. Click the image to resize it with the corner handles or wrap text around it using the Layout Options button. For structured information, Insert then Table lets you draw a grid of rows and columns, perfect for schedules, comparisons, or simple data.
For letters and notes, focus on fonts, alignment, and spacing. Word’s Spelling and Grammar check under the Review tab catches mistakes as you go, shown by colored underlines.
For reports and essays, use Heading styles, insert a table of contents from the References tab, and add page numbers from Insert so everything stays organized.
Saving, Sharing, and Printing
Save early and often with Ctrl+S. The desktop app saves as a .docx file by default, and if you save to OneDrive, Word also enables AutoSave and lets you share the document for real-time co-editing, similar to Google Docs. To print, open File then Print, choose your printer and number of copies, and click Print. You can also export a PDF from File then Save As or Export, which is the safest format for sending a finished document to someone else.
| Action | Windows | Mac |
|---|---|---|
| Save | Ctrl + S | Cmd + S |
| Bold | Ctrl + B | Cmd + B |
| Copy | Ctrl + C | Cmd + C |
| Undo | Ctrl + Z | Cmd + Z |
| Ctrl + P | Cmd + P |
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is Microsoft Word free?
The desktop app requires a Microsoft 365 subscription or a one-time Office purchase. However, Word for the web is free with a Microsoft account and covers all the beginner features in this guide, including formatting and saving to the cloud.
What file format does Word use?
Word saves documents as .docx by default. You can also save as .doc for older versions, .pdf for sharing, or plain text (.txt). The .docx format is the standard and works across all modern versions of Word.
How do I recover a document I did not save?
Open File then Info then Manage Document then Recover Unsaved Documents, or check the AutoRecover folder. If you saved to OneDrive with AutoSave on, your work is preserved automatically and version history is available.
Can I use Word on my phone?
Yes. The free Microsoft Word app for iPhone and Android lets you create and edit documents on the go. Files sync through OneDrive, so you can start on your phone and finish on a computer.
How do I add page numbers?
Go to the Insert tab, click Page Number, and choose a position such as the bottom of the page. Word numbers every page automatically and updates them as you add or remove content.

