If you’ve been manually formatting every heading in your Word documents, I completely understand — it’s just what most people do. But Word Styles formatting is one of those built-in features that makes the whole process so much faster and more consistent, and once you’ve tried it, you’ll wonder why you ever did it the other way.
What Are Styles, Exactly?
Styles are pre-designed formatting options built into every Word document. Think of them as saved looks — a heading style, for example, stores the font, size, colour, and spacing all in one place. Rather than selecting text and applying all those settings manually each time, you just click once and it’s done.
They’re already there waiting for you. You don’t need to install anything or dig through settings.
Where Do You Find Them?
Head to the Home tab on the ribbon and you’ll see the Style Gallery — a row of named styles like Heading 1, Heading 2, and Title. Click the small dropdown arrow to see a few more, or click the little expand arrow to see the full list.
There are actually quite a few pre-designed styles in there. I tend to stick to the Title style and the first three heading levels for most documents, but it’s good to know the full range is available if you need it.

Applying a Style — It’s One Click
Here’s the bit that surprises most people: you don’t even need to select the text. Because these are paragraph styles, you just need to click somewhere in the paragraph and then choose your style from the gallery.
Click in your heading text, click Heading 1 in the gallery — done. That’s really all there is to it.
If you change your mind and want to switch from Heading 1 to Heading 2, just click in that paragraph again and choose a different style from the gallery. It updates instantly.
The Keyboard Shortcut Way
If you want to go even faster, there are keyboard shortcuts for the heading styles. On your keyboard, it’s Ctrl + Alt + the heading number. So Ctrl + Alt + 1 gives you Heading 1, Ctrl + Alt + 2 gives you Heading 2, and so on.
One small note of caution: Ctrl + Alt + 4 can sometimes trigger the euro symbol (€) on certain keyboards, so you may want to avoid that one. Everything else from 1 to 3, and 5 to 9, works a treat.

The Real Magic: Updating All at Once
This is where it gets really satisfying. It’s been designed that changing the style updates it everywhere it’s used.
Let’s say you’ve applied Heading 1 throughout your document and then decide you’d like it to be purple instead of blue. You don’t need to go through and change every single one.
Just change the formatting on one instance. It doesn’t have to be just one thing either – change the font, size, colour, alignment. Right-click on the style name in the gallery, and choose Update Heading 1 to Match Selection. Every single Heading 1 in your document updates automatically. Every. Single. One.
The Modify Option for More Control
Update to Match Selection is great for changes you can make directly on the ribbon — font colour, bold, size and so on. But if you want to apply a number of different options in one go, including ones that aren’t available on the ribbon, right-click the style in the gallery and choose Modify instead.
This opens a dialogue box where you can adjust everything in one place and even see a preview as you go. Font, colour, spacing, and more — it’s all in there. Hit OK and, again, the whole document updates to reflect your changes. It’s a proper time-saver once you get used to it.
dates to reflect your changes. It’s a proper time-saver once you get used to it.

Why Bother?
Because consistency matters, especially in a professional document. When every heading looks the same, your document looks polished and intentional — even if you put it together in a hurry.
And because it saves you an enormous amount of time. Set up your styles once, apply them as you go, and update them in seconds whenever you change your mind. That’s a much better use of your time than clicking through a document making the same manual change fifty times.
Give it a go next time you’re working on anything longer than a page. I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised.
Created with the help of Claude AI from an original transcript.
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