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How to wrap text in Microsoft Excel

Oleg Magni/Pexels

Microsoft Excel may be a productivity app that emphasizes numbers, but it has useful tools for text as well. For instance, that handy spreadsheet app will let you wrap text. And getting it done is a breeze. In this guide, we'll show you two ways to wrap text using Microsoft Excel: Manually and automatically.

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Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • A PC

  • Microsoft Excel

How to wrap text in Excel using line breaks

Step 1: Go to the cell where you want to add the line break and double-click on it.

how to wrap text in excel insert line break screenshot 1
screenshot

Step 2: Within that same cell, go to where you want to insert the line break, then click on that area.

Step 3: Then press Alt + Enter on your keyboard. A new line in that cell should immediately appear.

how to wrap text in excel wrapped using an inserted line break
screenshot

How to wrap text in Excel using the Wrap Text formatting button

Step 1: Select the cells where you'd like the text to be wrapped. Then navigate to the Home tab of the ribbon menu at the top of the screen.

how to wrap text in excel automatically screenshot
screenshot

Step 2: Look at the Alignment section of the Home tab and select the Wrap Text button. (The button has the "ab" on the top row and the letter "c" on the bottom row with a blue arrow between them that points toward the "c".)

This should automatically wrap the text in your selected cells.

Step 3: Alternatively: You can use an Excel keyboard shortcut to automatically wrap text in Excel. To do so: Select your desired cells and then press Alt + H + W on your keyboard.

Don't forget to adjust your cell sizes

You may need to adjust the size of these cells to see the newly wrapped text better.

To do so: Mouse over their respective column and row borders until you see a black double arrow symbol. Then click and drag those borders until you've reached your desired cell sizes.

Any changes you make to specific cells in Microsoft Excel can be retained by locking them. Our guide to locking cells in Excel will explain that.

Anita George
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anita George has been writing for Digital Trends' Computing section since 2018. So for almost six years, Anita has written…
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