Easily wrap text in Excel for Windows & Mac

Have you ever written in an Excel sheet and noticed that your text sometimes gets cut off if you're writing something longer than the cell? While this is frustrating, you can easily fix it by enabling text wrapping. You can enable text wrapping for one cell, or you can set it for the entire sheet. You can also manually add line breaks if you prefer. Keep reading to learn how.

Text Wrapping in Excel

To wrap text in Excel, click on a cell and choose Wrap Text in the Home tab. You can apply text wrapping to all cells by selecting the entire document and clicking Wrap Text. Alternatively, manually line break in a cell by pressing Alt+Enter (Windows)/Ctrl+Opt+Return (Mac).

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Wrapping Text in One Cell

  1. If you don't have your Excel sheet open, make sure to open it up now.
    • While text wrapping makes it so the text won't get cut off based on the width of the cell, you can change the width of the cell at any time. The word wrapping will persist no matter how wide the cell is.
  2. This is the first tab in the ribbon, and it's the default tab. If you are already on this tab, you can skip this step.
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  3. It's in the "Editing" subsection of the Home tab. Once you click this button, the text in the cell will immediately wrap and adjust the height of the cell to accommodate the text inside of it.[1]
    • If the cell height doesn't automatically adjust to accommodate the text in the cell, double-click the bottom border of the cell.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Wrapping Text in All Cells

  1. You can do this by pressing Ctrl+A (Windows)/ Cmd+A (Mac), or by clicking the arrow in the upper-left corner of the spreadsheet.
  2. This is the first tab in the ribbon, and it's the default tab. If you are already on this tab, you can skip this step.
  3. It's in the "Editing" subsection of the Home tab. Once you click this button, any text that's currently being cut off in the sheet will wrap onto a new line. However, all of the cells in the document will now be formatted to word wrap even if they're currently empty.[2]
    • If the height of the cells doesn't automatically accommodate any current text in the cells, do the following:
      • In the Home tab, click Format in the "Cells" group.
      • Choose AutoFit Row Height under "Cell Size."
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Adding Manual Line Breaks

  1. This can be a cell that's currently empty, or the cell can have text in it already.
  2. If the cell is empty, type content into the cell until you've reached the right edge of the cell. If the cell has text, click into the cell and place your blinking line cursor where you want to add the line break.[3]
  3. A manual line break will be inserted where you placed your cursor.[4]
    • If you adjust the width of this cell later, the line break will remain in the same place. You'll have to go back and change where the line break is located to make the text wrap neatly in the cell again.
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About This Article

Stan Kats
Reviewed by:
Professional Technologist
This article was reviewed by Stan Kats and by wikiHow staff writer, Hannah Dillon. Stan Kats is a Professional Technologist and the COO and Chief Technologist for The STG IT Consulting Group in West Hollywood, California. Stan provides comprehensive technology solutions to businesses through managed IT services, and for individuals through his consumer service business, Stan's Tech Garage. Stan holds a BA in International Relations from The University of Southern California. He began his career working in the Fortune 500 IT world. Stan founded his companies to offer an enterprise-level of expertise for small businesses and individuals.
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Updated: December 11, 2025
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Categories: Spreadsheets
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