How do I convert HTML to Word while keeping all my formatting?
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Upload the HTML file and the converter maps every paragraph style, heading level, font, and inline run (bold/italic/underline) onto the equivalent Word construct. Where HTML and Word share a styling model (DOCX↔ODT↔DOC) fidelity is near-perfect; converting to a flat format like TXT deliberately drops styling and keeps only the text.
Will my paragraph and character styles survive HTML to Word?
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Named styles (Heading 1, Body Text, Quote) are remapped to the Word style table so they stay editable and consistent after conversion. Direct character formatting (a manually-bolded word) is preserved as inline Word runs. Converting into TXT or Markdown flattens named styles into plain text or Markdown markers respectively.
Does HTML to Word conversion preserve tables?
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Yes — table grids, merged cells, column widths, and per-cell alignment carry from HTML into Word when the Word format supports tables (DOC, DOCX, ODT, RTF, HTML). Converting to TXT renders tables as tab-separated text because plain text has no table model.
What happens to tracked changes and comments when I convert HTML to Word?
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Tracked changes and comments are preserved when both HTML and Word support revision metadata (DOCX, ODT, DOC). If you convert to a format without a revision model (TXT, RTF in basic mode), accept or reject changes in your editor first — otherwise the converter flattens them into the final text so nothing is silently lost.
Will my fonts look the same after converting HTML to Word?
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Font family, size, color, and spacing are written into the Word file by name. The exact rendering depends on whether the reader has that font installed; for guaranteed identical appearance across machines, convert to PDF instead. For an editable Word like DOCX or ODT, the font references travel with the file and resolve on open.
Can I convert HTML to Word and keep it editable?
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Yes — that is the point of a Word target like DOC, DOCX, ODT, or RTF: the output opens as a fully editable document in Word, LibreOffice, or Google Docs with text, styles, and tables intact. (A PDF target would instead lock the layout; choose Word here precisely because you want to keep editing.)
Do headers, footers, and page numbers transfer from HTML to Word?
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Headers, footers, page numbers, and section breaks carry into Word when the format is page-aware (DOCX, ODT, DOC, RTF). Flat targets (TXT, Markdown) have no page concept, so running headers and page numbers are dropped — the body text is preserved in reading order.
Will images embedded in my HTML appear in the Word?
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Inline and floating images embedded in the HTML are extracted and re-embedded in the Word at their original resolution and anchor position, for every Word format that stores images (DOCX, ODT, DOC, RTF, HTML). Converting to plain TXT drops images because text files cannot carry binary image data.
Can I batch-convert a folder of HTML files to Word?
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Yes — drop multiple HTML files into the upload zone and they convert in parallel, each producing its own Word download bundled as a ZIP. Premium runs more parallel workers and lifts the per-file size cap, so a large batch of long documents finishes in a fraction of the time.
Are my HTML documents private during conversion?
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Yes — uploaded HTML files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. We never open, read, store, or share document contents. The full retention window is documented at /privacy/.
Does HTML to Word keep lists and numbering?
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Bulleted and numbered lists, including multi-level outlines and restart-at-1 numbering, are mapped onto the Word list model (DOCX, ODT, DOC, RTF, HTML). Markdown targets convert them to `-`/`1.` markers; TXT targets keep the visible bullet characters and indentation as plain text.
Can I convert HTML to Word for use in Google Docs or Microsoft Word?
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Yes — DOCX is the universal interchange format both Google Docs and Word import natively, and DOC, ODT, and RTF import cleanly too. Convert your HTML to Word here, then drag the file straight into Docs or open it in Word; styles, tables, and images come through ready to edit.