This article explains how to combine several Word documents into one document. It’s particularly useful if you’ve written a dissertation, thesis or book and need to combine all of the chapters into one file.
These instructions work for Word 2007, Word 2010 and Word 2013; I’ve used Word 2010 for the screenshots
Why would I want to combine chapters into one document?
Lots of people do their writing a chapter at a time, and have it edited a chapter at a time, too. But the time will come when you want to put it all into one book, with page numbers running throughout, rather than messing around starting the page numbers for chapter 2 at the next number on from chapter 1, etc.
What’s the incorrect way to combine my chapters?
You might be tempted to pick up the text of each chapter and copy and paste it into one document. That can lead to issues and inconsistencies. This is the correct way to do it and actually takes less time and avoids you leaving out any bits of your individual chapters.
How do I prepare to combine my documents?
It’s pretty easy to combine several documents into one, however the most important point is …
The file names must be in the order that the chapters are going to be in.
Word will combine your chapter files in alphanumerical order.
If you have called your chapter files
Chapter 1 introduction
Chapter 2 review of the literature
Chapter 3 methodology
Chapter 4 conclusion
then that’s fine, they will combine in that order.
If you have called your chapter files
Introduction
Review of the literature
Methodology
Conclusion
then Word will carefully sort them alphabetically into
Conclusion
Introduction
Methodology
Review of the literature
when it combines your documents.
The best thing to do is add a number 1, 2, 3, etc at the start of your file names BEFORE YOU START COMBINING, so you know they will come out in the correct order.
How do I combine my documents?
OK, so we’ve got, say, four documents or chapters to combine into one.
First, open a new, blank document (using the Home button, New, and choosing a blank document)
Then, click on the Insert tab and find Object in the Text area:
Click on the arrow to the right of Object to get the drop-down menu, and click on Text from File:
Now navigate to your files and select the ones you want to combine.
Hold down the Control Key and click on all the ones you want to combine (or click on the top one, hold down Shift and click on the bottom one if you want all of them). Once you have them all highlighted, click Insert.
Note: it doesn’t matter what order you are displaying them in or what order you click them in, it will choose them and insert them in alphabetical or numerical order, as I mentioned above.
Now you will have one big document including all of your chapters!
And … if you had footnotes in the documents, and had set page numbers to show, they will automatically update in the combined document to be numbered consecutively (if you want start your footnote numbering at 1 for each chapter, you’ll need to look at my posts on footnotes and endnotes).
Don’t forget to save your document!
PS: If you find you lose your formatting when combining Word documents, read this article for the solution.
—–
This is part of my series on how to avoid time-consuming “short cuts” and use Word in the right way to maximise your time and improve the look of your documents.
If you have enjoyed this post and found it useful, please click on the “share” buttons below or tell your friends and colleagues about it! Thank you!
Please note, these hints work with versions of Microsoft Word currently in use – Word 2007, Word 2010 and Word 2013, all for PC. Mac compatible versions of Word should have similar options. Always save a copy of your document before manipulating it. I bear no responsibility for any pickles you might get yourself into!
Find all the short cuts here …
Other useful articles on this website
How to combine Word documents without losing the formatting
José Martínez
September 4, 2015 at 11:51 am
Why not use Master documents?
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
September 4, 2015 at 11:54 am
It is indeed a good idea to use Master and Subdocuments, however I like to first list the most simple ways that people can do things correctly (rather than copying and pasting, for example) and then move on to more complex ideas – many people are worried enough about combining two document without going into heading levels and Master documents. But it is a topic I will cover later on.
LikeLike
pentrichrevolutiongoestoaustralia
July 24, 2019 at 4:44 pm
When I do this it only imports the first page of the document, not the whole of it, I need to be able to move several sections into one document without it renumbering the footnotes? am really struggling, I usually change to pdf’s but I am even struggling to do that as its coming up with an error warning which I can’t work around either 😥
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 24, 2019 at 4:46 pm
Hm, sounds like it’s a document with some issues in the first place. Have you tried (and I know this is a horrible thing) stripping out all the formatting and copy-pasting it into a new document without the final carriage return?
LikeLike
Erin Willard, Freelance Copy Editor
September 4, 2015 at 3:07 pm
Reblogged this on Erin Willard, Copy Editor.
LikeLike
dgkaye
September 9, 2015 at 3:47 am
Thanks for this great info! Shared! 🙂
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
September 13, 2015 at 6:48 pm
Glad you liked it, and thank you!
LikeLike
Alla Uddin Mahsud
October 20, 2015 at 10:53 am
I just loved it. The post on the alphabetical order of bibliography was amazing. I am just playing around with word and getting the exact results..
LikeLike
sue krisman
July 30, 2016 at 10:09 am
thank you so much – clearest explanation on anything online – thanks for doing this Sue
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 30, 2016 at 1:29 pm
You’re welcome – glad it helped!
LikeLike
Melissa Pritchard
September 18, 2016 at 1:17 am
How would you go about leaving the page numbers in each document as they are, instead of them running consecutively? For instance, I want to combine three documents into one, but I want to maintain the page numbers of each document. I want my second document and third document to each start with the pages numbered 1, in my one combine document.
Thank you
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
September 19, 2016 at 7:22 am
To do that, you’ll need to add section breaks between each document in the combined document, then start the page numbering at 1 (or whatever) after the section break.
LikeLike
Tessa
November 2, 2016 at 1:46 pm
Thanks for posting! Any clue on automatically updating the “combined”-file when making changes in the separate chapter-files?
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
November 2, 2016 at 3:42 pm
Thank you for your question. I don’t think you can auto-update like you can a linked Excel file; I think you would have to recombine once changes were all made, or make changes in the combined file.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Bob Cope
February 3, 2017 at 9:18 pm
What determines the maximum number of files you can combine at one time?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Liz Dexter
February 4, 2017 at 6:16 pm
I’m afraid I don’t know the answer to this, and I can’t find an answer, either. One day I’ll try to combine hundreds and post about it. In the meantime, I’ll leave your question up in case anyone knows the answer!
LikeLike
Eva Blaskovic
February 5, 2017 at 7:20 am
This is great info, Liz. I use Word all the time and have never tried this.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Liz Dexter
February 5, 2017 at 9:52 am
Thanks, Eva, glad you found it helpful!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Michele Coe
February 24, 2017 at 2:37 pm
I’m having trouble maintaining my Chapter # – Page # format (in footer) when combining chapters. I have next page section breaks at the end of each chapter, and my Chapter #’s are linked to Heading 1, Level 1 in a multilevel list. But when I combine, all the Chapter numbers in my footer change to the first chapter number. Footers are not linked. Any ideas?
LikeLike
Dr Kenneth S Heard
March 10, 2017 at 1:51 pm
But what about “preserving the Formatting” of each (previously separate) Section? The MS “Insert Object” feature specifically states “Text from File” (nothing about *formatted* text!
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
March 10, 2017 at 2:32 pm
I can report that I’ve done this recently with a client’s two sets of chapters and they retained their formatting; they didn’t turn into .txt style unformatted text documents. I hope that helps!
LikeLike
Paul Grayston
March 13, 2017 at 5:50 pm
Worked well for me merging 36 completed 2-page forms into one appendix document for a report. Thanks for the tip.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
March 14, 2017 at 8:26 pm
Really glad I could help!
LikeLike
Dan Starcevich
May 7, 2017 at 2:47 pm
Thanks for this advise. I am running MSWord on a Mac version 15.33. When I use the Insert > Object > From File. Only the first page of the selected file is visible in the new document. When I double click on the page it opens the source file. How do I get all the pages of the inserted file to appear in the new document?
Thanks!
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
May 8, 2017 at 9:34 am
I’m sorry, as it should say on this blog post, I am only experienced with and write about Word for PC. But I’ll leave your comment up here as quite often other people answer people’s questions on the blog!
LikeLike
Adina Sherer
May 8, 2017 at 12:20 pm
We have a slightly different problem – we have a very large book published in a few separate parts. When we merge the final product, everything is FINE except procedure numbering. This is a User Guide with literally hundreds of procedures. Each Procedure is introduced with a Procedure Heading line, followed by numbered steps. When we merge multiple documents, the procedure numbers ALL become Continue from Previous – the numbering runs up into the thousands! Someone has to search through ALL those pages for each Procedure Heading style line, select the first numbered item after it,and manually set it to restart at 1. Does this sound familiar? Any advice? We could just select all content in each book and convert the field codes to plain text, but then we can never edit or update it, and the ToC is destroyed.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
May 8, 2017 at 2:07 pm
I’m afraid that’s beyond my scope, too, but I’ll leave it here in the hopes someone drops by to help out.
LikeLike
May 18, 2017 at 6:25 pm
I am working on a book. Each chapter is a separate file. You’re guidance on assembling them is very helpful. Thank you. Can you help me with creating running chapter titles that will appear in the combined manuscript? Is there a way to tag the title in the chapter files for automatically creating a running chapter title after the manuscript is assembled? Ditto re creating a table of contents?
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
May 20, 2017 at 11:33 am
To create the running chapter titles you will need to insert section breaks between the chapters and set up a new header in each chapter. For creating a table of contents, you will need to add heading styles to your document – see more here https://libroediting.com/2012/03/21/creating-a-contents-page/
LikeLike
LaToya
July 9, 2017 at 5:35 pm
Thank you! At the end of dissertation writing and revising, I don’t want to get caught up with unnecessary time and energy drains.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 10, 2017 at 6:51 am
I’m glad I could help!
LikeLike
Ian Martyn
July 15, 2017 at 10:28 pm
Your solution for merging multiple docs in Word 16 doesn’t work on my version, because using the CTRL or SHIFT won’t select multiple docs as it does anywhere else in Word. have you come across this problem and is there a cure?
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 16, 2017 at 5:46 pm
Thank you for your question, Ian. I haven’t actually come across the issue myself, I wonder if anyone else has. Have you tried closing and restarting Word? I know that sounds simplistic, but you never know …
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 24, 2017 at 8:48 am
Ian – I have checked with a few colleagues and here’s the answer.
When you are inserting several documents into one document to combine, for example, chapters, you can choose as many as you want using the CTRL and SHIFT keys.
If you are using the Combine feature that allows you to combine two documents based on the same text and their changes to make one document, you can only combine two at a time so won’t be able to select multiple documents.
I hope that helps.
LikeLike
Hitch
July 18, 2017 at 5:58 pm
I have a question–something I’ve never dealt with. I have a client that sent me a large set of files, and I was concatenating them to analyze the file (for conversion to eBook). I used the insert–>Text from File method, which I’ve used for years. However, several of the files had chapter notes (Endnotes for a chapter). If you place your cursor in the end of the body text, then the endnotes move, past the end of the newly-inserted text, which is a different chapter. If you place your cursor at the end of the document, then, you’re inserting text into the footnotes/endnotes, not the body.
How is this done? Or–is it simply not done, and somehow, done manually? I can honestly say, after decades of using Word, this one stumped me, and NO online tutorial discusses it (probably for the obvious reason–there’s no good way to handle it).
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 18, 2017 at 9:45 pm
Hm, did you combine all the documents into one new empty document, using the method described here, or did you have one document already open and insert the others into it? What happens if you combine them all into one brand new document all at the same time?
LikeLike
kimberlyhitch
July 20, 2017 at 4:11 pm
I added them the way that I always do–using “insert” “text from file.” When you get to, let’s say, file 7 of 10, and you want to add 8-9-10, WHERE do you place the cursor, to add the next documents? I say that there’s no sane way to do it. As I said, if you put the cursor at the end of the body text in file 7, the endnotes get pushed back-back-back to the end of the 10th file. If you place your cursor at the end of the footnotes/endnotes, then 8-9-10 are all footnotes. (BTW, this finally explains to me something I saw in a file we were sent, a year ago, in which 19K of a 150K-word book was shown as the word count–I finally figured out that someone had “pasted” or typed or ??? 130K of the book into the footnotes. Which is why they weren’t included in the main word count. But how much you want to bet, someone was concatenating the files, and this happened to them?)
So–I don’t see how the method of concatenation would matter. I don’t particularly want to combine them simultaneously, b/c no matter what you do with numbering, it doesn’t always work. I can try it, but I suspect the same issue remains.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
July 20, 2017 at 4:18 pm
Ah, I see. I only ever do all the documents in one go, as I’ve never had anything but horrendous messes doing some and then some more later on, as you are doing. When you say it doesn’t always work, do you mean they don’t always go in together in the correct order? I’ve not had that happen but that’s not to say I don’t think it could. I can’t see where you could place the cursor where it would work if you’ve got footnotes etc., as you’ve tried both the options. The only thing I can suggest is doing it all at once and just seeing if that works, as it can’t claim then to be obeying where you’ve placed the cursor and being “helpful” as Word inevitably tries to be.
Sorry I can’t give you a definitive answer. I would like to know what happens if you do them all together, but who knows what will happen, really. I’ll leave these comments up as sometimes people happen by years later and answer a tricky question. I’ve done a search but all I’ve found is my own article!
LikeLike
Don Stansloski
April 29, 2018 at 12:22 pm
I have the same problem and have found no solution. Using end notes at the end of each chapter seems impossible. I hope someone has an idea.
LikeLike
Don Stansloski
April 29, 2018 at 1:33 pm
Good morning.
None of the ideas I have found worked and I have puzzled over this for a day or two. This did work for me, so I am answering my own post.
Convert all the endnotes in each chapter to footnotes. To do this choose references, footnotes choose convert, pick the endnote to footnote choice and fill in the blanks with the right format. Add section breaks using the previously described method. Combine all the chapters using the previously described method. Convert all footnotes to endnotes using the references, footnotes choose convert method, but now in reverse.
I am using Microsoft Office Professional Plus 13.
At least this worked for me.
Don
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
April 29, 2018 at 1:51 pm
Thanks Don, I was going to to come in to suggest this but by the time I’d done that, here was your comment. I’m glad you confirmed it works, too!
LikeLike
Donald Stansloski
April 30, 2018 at 12:04 am
Glad you noticed I hope others benefit from it good night
LikeLike
Sally
December 18, 2017 at 3:01 am
I have just tried this – sounded great – thank you. But I lost all the formatting! There are pictures and unusually formatted text – all gone in the new doc. Any suggestions? I’m trying to combine 18 chapters in a workbook for a course I run.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
December 18, 2017 at 8:07 am
Thank you for your question, Sally. Formatting in Word is tricky. One possible solution I’ve found is to insert a section break at the end of each of your documents before you combine them, as Word *should* then retain the formatting in each section. Can you give that a try and let me know if it works, as I can add it into the article if it does and I don’t have a suitable practice text right now myself? Hope that helps!
LikeLike
Sally
December 21, 2017 at 1:12 am
Thanks so much Liz – that did the trick! It worked amazingly well – just needed to tweak a few bits that didn’t quite keep the formatting, but 99% of the document retained it exactly. It was fantastic! Thanks!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Liz Dexter
December 21, 2017 at 8:18 am
Fabulous – thank you so much for reporting back! I might add it to this post or write a new one so people can find it easily. And I’m glad I could help!
LikeLike
Naphtali
November 24, 2018 at 7:28 pm
Hi Liz. This is good info. Thanks. I just finished “proof-writing” an Upwork client’s sixteen individual chapters and thought I was finished. Now she wants me to merge into one document and I know this can be dicy. They do not have page numbers yet and the chapter number begin with chapter 1, without the Introduction having a number. So, IF I decide to do it (and she provides additional financial incentive, lol) would I have to go back and edit all the chapters from the Introduction on with numbers? Any yes, formatting is another concern. I use WPS Writer by the way, bcs Microsoft kept asking me to pay to continue with Word.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
November 27, 2018 at 6:54 am
If the chapter numbers have a heading style it should work, however I’m only familiar with Word so can’t comment on WPS Writer. You can buy one-off versions of Word, I have a subscription but you don’t have to have one.
LikeLike
Bryan
May 29, 2019 at 2:24 pm
Hi: I had to write to say thanks for the information re merging documents in Word. I had dreaded the operation, but hey presto, 50 chapters all nice and neat!
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
June 1, 2019 at 8:33 am
I’m so glad this worked well for you and I could help!
LikeLike
Rico
August 9, 2021 at 6:11 pm
This was very helpful. I Googled how to combine word documents to help a colleague of mine and it worked like a charm. He had been struggling with it so i decided to help him. He was so happy.
LikeLike
Liz Dexter
August 9, 2021 at 8:45 pm
Glad I could help!
LikeLike