How do you format a Heading to keep it together with the following paragraph?

Most of the time, we want the text in a Microsoft Word document to automatically wrap, that is, to move to the next line when it is too long to fit on one line. Word wrap is great, except when it breaks up text we want to stay together, such as dates, names, phone numbers, phrases, formulas, titles, or other text that should remain together on the same line. Fortunately, Word has some easy ways to keep text together. To learn these tricks to keep text together in Microsoft Word, continue reading or watch my how-to video:

Some examples of text you might want to keep together and not break up on separate lines:

  • September 2, 2019
  • Christopher A. Jones, Ph.D.
  • [555] 123-4567
  • State-of-the-art

Your options for keeping text together in Microsoft Word include:

  • Non-breaking spaces
  • Non-breaking hyphens
  • Non-breaking paragraphs & lines

Non-Breaking Spaces & Non-Breaking Hyphens

The common solution: what most people do to keep text together is move to the beginning of the text and press [Enter] to start a new line. This is fine until any of the text changes and causes breaks in the wrong place. Now you’re wasting time going back to remove these extra lines when you no longer need the forced break to the text. And this manual approach doesn’t work well if you have paragraph formatting or styles that add space between paragraphs.

The right solution: keep text together with special characters. Specifically, delete the spaces or hyphens and replace normal spaces and hyphens with non-breaking spaces or non-breaking hyphens:

  • Non-breaking space: [Ctrl] + [Shift] + [Spacebar]
  • Non-breaking hyphen: [Ctrl] + [Shift] + [Hyphen]

As the name implies, non-breaking characters connect the text together, and the entire phrase or group of characters will all automatically move to the next line together but only as needed.

To view non-breaking space and hyphen characters in a document, click Show/Hide in the Paragraph group [Home tab]. Word represents non-breaking space characters with a degree symbol [°] and non-breaking hyphen characters with a double‑length hyphen [these are a bit harder to distinguish from regular text].

Non-Breaking Paragraphs and Lines

Next, let’s go one step further. When you don’t want a paragraph or even several lines of text to break between two pages, don’t press multiple [Enter] keys to move the text to the next page. Instead, try the following Word techniques to keep text automatically together:

  1. Select the paragraph or section of text you want to keep together.
  2. On the Home tab in Word, click the Paragraph group’s dialog launcher [the small arrow at the bottom-right of the group].
  3. Pick the Line and Page Breaks
  4. Check the Keep lines together option, and click OK.
  5. If you have multiple paragraphs selected, for instance, a title with following text, also click on Keep with next which will keep the paragraphs together on the same page.

Bonus Word Tricks

To find non-breaking spaces and non-breaking hyphens in your text, use the Find feature as follows:

  1. On the Home tab, click the Find icon in the Editing group on the right or press the keyboard shortcut [Ctrl] + F.
  2. In the Navigation Pane to the left, enter one of the following: ^s to find non-breaking space; ^~ to find non-breaking hyphens.
  3. Use the Navigation Pane to move through the results.

Make sure you have the Show/Hide non-printing characters features turned on so you can see the hidden characters for these non-breaking symbols.

Discover more ways to save time editing and formatting your Word documents at: TheSoftwarePro.com/Word.

When I write psychological evaluation reports, I start with a template that has headings for the various sections. Until now, I always had to check the document before printing to make sure that no headings were alone on the last line of the page, with its accompanying paragraph on the next page. It did not take much time to fix the problems, but it was a pain to re-paginate the report if I made future edits. Its main cost was a bit of worry each time I finished a report.

All these years it never occurred to me to ask whether Microsoft engineers had anticipated this problem!

In Microsoft Word, there is an option to keep a paragraph on the same page as the next paragraph. I use Word 2010 for Windows so your experience might be slightly different. I select the heading, and click the format button in the Paragraph section.

Then click the Line and Page Breaks tab.

Then check the Keep with next box.

Now right-click Heading 1 on the Styles portion of the Home tab on the ribbon. Select Update Heading 1 to Match Selection.

Now everything you have marked as a Level 1 heading will stay with its accompanying paragraph. You can repeat the process for Level 2 and Level 3 headings, if needed.

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