Converting Word documents to PDF is one of the most common document tasks. Done correctly, the PDF output looks professional and renders identically on every device. Done poorly, it can result in formatting issues, missing fonts, or incorrect page breaks. This guide ensures perfect results every time.

Why Convert Word to PDF?

  • Universal viewing: Recipients don't need Microsoft Word installed
  • Fixed layout: Identical appearance on every device and OS
  • Professional standard: PDF is expected for proposals, contracts, and reports
  • Security: PDF prevents accidental editing of finalized documents
  • Print consistency: Predictable print output regardless of printer settings

Best Methods for Word to PDF Conversion

Method 1: DocsFlow Online Converter (Free)

Our Word to PDF converter is free, fast, and requires no software installation. It accurately preserves formatting, fonts, images, and tables from your Word document.

  1. Go to Word to PDF tool
  2. Upload your DOC or DOCX file (up to 100MB)
  3. Choose orientation if needed
  4. Click Convert to PDF
  5. Download your PDF

Method 2: Microsoft Word Built-In Export

In Word 2013+: File > Save As > PDF. Or File > Export > Create PDF/XPS. This is reliable for documents you've created yourself in Word.

Key settings when saving from Word:

  • Optimize for: Standard — Higher quality, good for printing
  • Optimize for: Minimum size — Smaller files, suitable for email
  • Include non-printing information — Document properties, bookmarks

Method 3: Print to PDF (Any Platform)

Open in Word > Ctrl+P (Print) > Select "Microsoft Print to PDF" or "Save as PDF" (macOS). This works from any application that can print.

Preserving Formatting During Conversion

Fonts

Fonts must be embedded in the PDF for them to display correctly on all devices. When saving from Word, ensure "Embed fonts in the file" is checked in Options. Our online converter automatically handles font embedding.

Images

High-resolution images in Word are preserved in the PDF at their embedded resolution. If using Word's built-in export, setting to "Standard" quality preserves image quality best.

Tables

Tables from Word convert well. Ensure table borders are explicit (not just visual spacing) for cleanest PDF output. Merged cells and colored headers are preserved.

Tracked Changes

If your document has Track Changes, accept or reject all changes before converting. Otherwise, the PDF will show the accepted final state (changes hidden) by default — but it's better to be explicit.

Common Conversion Issues and Fixes

Page Breaks in Wrong Places

Review and manually set page breaks in Word before converting. Use Ctrl+Enter to insert manual page breaks at the right locations.

Header/Footer Issues

Different first page, odd/even headers — verify these appear correctly in Word's Print Preview before converting.

Table of Contents Links

TOC hyperlinks work in PDFs when converted properly. Ensure links are enabled in the export settings (checked by default in most converters).

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Word to PDF preserve hyperlinks? +

Yes. Hyperlinks in your Word document are preserved as clickable links in the PDF output.

Can I convert a Word document with embedded Excel charts? +

Yes. Embedded Excel charts, SmartArt diagrams, and other Office objects are rendered as high-quality images in the PDF.

Will the PDF be the same size as the Word file? +

Usually smaller. PDFs typically compress document content more efficiently than Word's internal format, especially for text-heavy documents.

What Word versions are supported? +

Both DOC (Word 97-2003) and DOCX (Word 2007+) formats are supported.