Fix: Word Hyperlinks Not Working or Clickable

By GenText Editorial Team 2026年3月30日 已更新 2026年4月2日 word-tutorial
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快速回答

Ctrl+Click hyperlinks to follow them. To edit broken links, right-click > Edit Link, update the URL, and test. Rebuild links with Find & Replace.

The Problem

Hyperlinks in your Word document aren’t working when clicked—they won’t open websites or navigate to referenced pages. Sometimes links appear broken or can’t be edited. You need hyperlinks to function properly for document recipients.

Quick Fix

Test hyperlink functionality:

  1. Hold Ctrl and click the hyperlink to test if it works
  2. If it opens correctly, the link works (Ctrl+Click required in edit mode)
  3. If it doesn’t work, right-click the hyperlink
  4. Select “Edit Link” or “Remove Hyperlink”
  5. Check the URL and update if incorrect

Step-by-Step Solution

Hyperlinks must have correct formatting to work.

Step 1: Right-click a non-working hyperlink.

Step 2: Select “Edit Link” or “Edit Hyperlink” from the context menu.

Step 3: The Edit Hyperlink dialog opens.

Step 4: Check the “Address:” field—this contains the actual URL or file path.

Step 5: Verify the address is correct:

  • For web links: Should start with http:// or https://
  • For file links: Should be a valid file path (C:\Documents\file.docx)
  • For email: Should start with mailto:

Step 6: If the URL is incorrect, fix it by typing the correct address.

Step 7: Click OK to apply the correction.

Step 8: Test the link again with Ctrl+Click.

If a website link is broken because the URL changed, update it.

Step 1: Right-click the broken hyperlink.

Step 2: Select “Edit Link.”

Step 3: In the “Address:” field, type the correct URL.

Step 4: Make sure it includes http:// or https:// at the beginning.

Step 5: Click OK.

Step 6: Ctrl+Click to test the updated link.

Step 7: If the website has moved or been taken down, search for the new URL and update it.

Links to files stop working if those files move.

Step 1: Right-click the broken file link.

Step 2: Select “Edit Link.”

Step 3: In the Address field, update the file path.

Step 4: Use the “Browse” button (folder icon) to navigate to where the file currently is.

Step 5: Select the file.

Step 6: Click Open.

Step 7: The path updates automatically.

Step 8: Click OK.

Step 9: Test the link with Ctrl+Click.

Sometimes the best fix is removing and recreating the link.

Step 1: Right-click the problematic hyperlink.

Step 2: Select “Remove Hyperlink.”

Step 3: The link text remains but is no longer a hyperlink.

Step 4: Select the text again.

Step 5: Go to Insert > Link or press Ctrl+K.

Step 6: The Insert Hyperlink dialog opens.

Step 7: In “Link to:” section, choose what type of link:

  • Existing File or Web Page (for external URLs or files)
  • Place in This Document (for internal navigation)
  • Create New Document (for new file links)
  • Email Address (for mailto links)

Step 8: Enter the address/path.

Step 9: Click OK to create the new hyperlink.

Step 10: Test it with Ctrl+Click.

Email links sometimes malfunction if formatting is wrong.

Step 1: Right-click the email hyperlink.

Step 2: Select “Edit Link.”

Step 3: Check that the address starts with “mailto:” followed by the email address.

Step 4: It should look like: mailto:someone@email.com

Step 5: Verify the email address has no spaces and correct spelling.

Step 6: Click OK.

Step 7: Test by Ctrl+Click (opens email client or prompts to open).

If multiple links are broken, update them all at once.

Step 1: Select all text in the document (Ctrl+A).

Step 2: Press Ctrl+Shift+U or right-click > Update Fields.

Step 3: A dialog appears asking what to update.

Step 4: Select “Update all links” or “Update broken links.”

Step 5: Click OK.

Step 6: Word attempts to update any links it can find.

Step 7: Manually test several links to verify they work.

Sometimes plain text URLs aren’t recognized as links.

Step 1: Select a plain text URL in your document (e.g., “www.example.com”).

Step 2: Go to Insert > Link or press Ctrl+K.

Step 3: The Insert Hyperlink dialog opens.

Step 4: The URL might already be populated. If not, type it.

Step 5: Ensure it starts with http:// or https://.

Step 6: Click OK.

Step 7: The plain text is now a functioning hyperlink.

Protected documents might have hyperlinks disabled for security.

Step 1: If hyperlinks don’t work and your document is protected, unprotect it first.

Step 2: Go to File > Info > Protect Document.

Step 3: Look for “Protect Document” button or similar.

Step 4: Click it and select “Restrict Editing” or “Encrypt.”

Step 5: Disable protection if it’s currently on.

Step 6: Click OK.

Step 7: Now hyperlinks should work.

Step 8: You can re-protect the document after testing.

Why This Happens

Incorrect URL formatting: URLs missing http:// or https:// prefix.

File has moved: Links to local files break when files relocate.

Website changed: Web links break when URLs change or sites are taken down.

Email formatting wrong: Email links missing “mailto:” prefix.

Edit mode vs. Read mode: Hyperlinks require Ctrl+Click in edit mode (by design for safety).

Document protection: Some protection settings disable hyperlinks.

Corrupted link metadata: Links become corrupted in documents recovered from crashes.

How to Prevent It

Use stable URLs: Link to permanent URLs rather than temporary ones that might change.

Test links before sharing: Always Ctrl+Click links to verify they work before distributing documents.

Store linked files together: Keep files and documents that reference them in the same folder structure.

Use relative paths: For file links, use relative paths so documents work if the folder moves.

Verify web links periodically: For important documents, periodically verify links still work.

Create link update schedule: For living documents shared with teams, establish a schedule to check links.

Still Not Working?

Copy to new document: Create new document, copy and paste the text with links, and recreate hyperlinks fresh.

Check internet connection: Web links won’t work if you’re offline. Verify internet connection before testing.

Try different browser: If web link opens, it might use your default browser. Try changing default browser in system settings.

Verify file still exists: Use File Explorer to confirm linked files still exist at the referenced location.

Use Word Online: Share document via Word Online (cloud) where hyperlinks are single-clickable and may function differently.

Check for malware: Malware can interfere with hyperlinks. Run antivirus scan if many links are broken.

常见问题

Why do I have to Ctrl+Click hyperlinks instead of just clicking them?

Word requires Ctrl+Click to follow hyperlinks while editing documents (to prevent accidental navigation). Single-click only works in Reading Mode or when viewing a PDF export. This is by design for editing safety.

What's the difference between a broken link and a link that just doesn't work?

A broken link points to a file or webpage that no longer exists or has moved. A non-working link might exist but be incorrectly formatted. Right-click the link and check the URL to diagnose which type you have.

How do I convert all my hyperlinks to clickable URLs for sharing?

Save your document as PDF (File > Save As > PDF). In PDF, hyperlinks are clickable with single clicks. Alternatively, share via Word Online where hyperlinks are single-clickable.

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