Written by Allen Wyatt (last updated March 28, 2026)
This tip applies to Word 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, 2021, 2024, and Word in Microsoft 365
Kyle has a document that includes quite a few hyperlinks to web pages. He wonders if there is a way to automatically validate all of the hyperlinks to make sure they are still active and not broken.
The internet is nothing if not a fluid place. Websites come and go, and links to those websites change all the time. Indeed, there is no guarantee that a link that works today will still work tomorrow. Those who run websites understand this and often spend considerable time checking links and fixing those that no longer work properly.
When it comes to Word documents, though, checking links can be a challenge. If your document has just a few links, the easiest way to check them is to just click on the link (or Ctrl+click) and see what comes up. Kyle, though, indicated that his document has quite a few hyperlinks, and following the manual approach can be tedious, at best.
Since webmasters do link checking so often, there are many tools and services that can be used for checking websites. This means you could save your Word document as an HTML file, open it in your favorite web browser, and then use a link-checking service or extension. You can find such extensions by doing a web search for "link checker browser extension," without the quote marks.
A great way to check links is to do so using a macro. The following is one approach that could be used:
Sub CheckHyperlinks()
Dim hl As Hyperlink
Dim http As Object
Dim iGood As Integer
Dim iBad As Integer
Dim sResult As String
Dim sMsg As String
On Error Resume Next
Set http = CreateObject("WinHttp.WinHttpRequest.5.1")
If http Is Nothing Then
MsgBox "WinHTTP service not available", vbCritical
Exit Sub
End If
Application.ScreenUpdating = False
iGood = 0
iBad = 0
For Each hl In ActiveDocument.Hyperlinks
sResult = ""
If Left(hl.Address, 4) = "http" Then
http.Open "GET", hl.Address, False
http.SetRequestHeader "User-Agent", "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/120.0.0.0 Safari/537.36"
http.Send
iBad = iBad + 1 ' Assume link is bad
If Err.Number <> 0 Then
sResult = "Site connection failure"
Err.Clear
Else
Select Case http.Status
Case 200:
' Link is good, so adjust counts
iBad = iBad - 1
iGood = iGood + 1
' Remove the apostrophe from the following line
' if you want good links commented
' sResult = "OK"
Case 404: sResult = "Broken (404 - ?? ????)"
Case 403: sResult = "Rejected (403 - blocked)"
Case Else: sResult = "Status code: " & http.Status
End Select
End If
If sResult > "" Then
ActiveDocument.Comments.Add Range:=hl.Range, Text:=sResult
End If
End If
Next hl
sMsg = "Finished!" & vbCr
sMsg = sMsg & "Good links: " & iGood & vbCr
sMsg = sMsg & "Bad links: " & iBad
Application.ScreenUpdating = True
MsgBox sMsg, vbInformation
End Sub
The macro steps through each hyperlink in the document and, if it begins with "http," checks to see if the site or page can be reached. If it cannot, then the error code is attached to the link using a comment. When the macro is done, it displays a summary of how many links were checked and the findings.
WordTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Word training. (Microsoft Word is the most popular word processing software in the world.) This tip (517) applies to Microsoft Word 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, 2021, 2024, and Word in Microsoft 365.
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2026-03-28 11:54:22
Brian Lair
Very elegant solution — I learned a lot of features I hadn’t seen before. Thanks!
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