How to Set Proper Heading Structure in Microsoft Word (2026)
How to Set Proper Heading Structure in Microsoft Word (2026)
Proper heading structure organizes content hierarchically and improves accessibility. Screen readers use headings to navigate documents. Proper structure ensures your document is accessible and well-organized.
手順
Step 1: Select Title Text
Click the document title or main heading you want to format.
Step 2: Apply Heading 1 Style
In the Home tab, click ‘Heading 1’ style. This becomes your document’s main heading.
Step 3: Select Subheadings
Click each section heading and apply ‘Heading 2’ style.
Step 4: Apply Heading 3 for Subsections
If you have third-level headings, apply ‘Heading 3’ style.
Step 5: Skip Heading Levels
Avoid skipping levels (e.g., don’t jump from Heading 1 to Heading 3). Always follow the sequence.
Step 6: Verify Structure
Click Navigation Pane (View > Navigation Pane) to see your document’s heading structure. Correct any improper nesting.
Step 7: Check with Accessibility Tool
Use Review > Check Accessibility to verify heading structure is logically organized.
よくある間違い
- Using random heading styles for formatting—always follow the hierarchy
- Skipping heading levels (Heading 1 to Heading 3)—always follow proper sequence
- Not realizing that formatting (bold, large font) isn’t the same as using heading styles
ヒントとコツ
- Use heading styles for all structural elements, not just main sections
- Headings make documents easier to scan even for sighted users—they provide visual breaks
- Generate a Table of Contents from headings—it updates automatically when heading structure changes
よくある質問
Can I change heading appearance?
Yes. Modify heading styles (Right-click heading > Modify Style) to change font, size, and color globally.
How many heading levels should I use?
Use as many as your content requires, but typically 2-3 levels. More than 4 levels suggests restructuring.
Does heading structure affect page breaks?
Not directly. However, you can set headings to start on new pages in paragraph formatting.