Please Note: This article is written for users of the following Microsoft Word versions: 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, and Word in Microsoft 365. If you are using an earlier version (Word 2003 or earlier), this tip may not work for you. For a version of this tip written specifically for earlier versions of Word, click here: Getting Rid of Many Hyperlinks.
Written by Allen Wyatt (last updated September 19, 2020)
This tip applies to Word 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, and Word in Microsoft 365
Do you create documents by pasting information that was copied from the Internet? This is not unusual for some people, as there is quite a bit of public-domain information that can be copied from the Internet. When you paste your information into a document, you may notice that there are quite a few hyperlinks in your documents. What if you want to get rid of those hyperlinks?
There are several ways you can approach this problem. One of the easiest ways is to simply change how you paste your information. If you do a simple Ctrl+V to paste, then Word tries to retain as much of the formatting and other attributes of the original text as it can, including hyperlinks. (This is not to say that hyperlinks are strictly formatting; they are not. They are really fields—but more on that in a moment.)
Instead of pasting using Ctrl+V, use Paste Special to paste Unformatted Text. (You use Paste Special by displaying the Home tab of the ribbon, clicking the down arrow under the Paste tool, and then choosing Paste Special.) Word then inserts the information as plain text, without any formatting. It also does not make hyperlinks active in the document. After pasting in this method, you can proceed to format the text as you want.
Another solution is to convert all the hyperlinks to regular text. After doing your paste, press Ctrl+A to select the entire document and then press Ctrl+Shift+F9. As mentioned earlier, hyperlinks are implemented through the use of fields. If you press Ctrl+Shift+F9, then any selected fields are converted to their results and the fields are removed. Thus, the hyperlinks are removed. You can also press Ctrl+6 (the key "6" on the number keys at the top of the keyboard) to achieve the same results as Ctrl+Shift+F9.
There are two drawbacks to this approach. First, not only are the hyperlinks removed, but so are all the other fields in your document. (If you have other fields, you should understand that they will be affected, as well.) The second drawback is that the formatting of your hyperlinks is still there—they show as blue and underlined.
The first drawback is easy to compensate for, provided you don't mind using a macro. The following macro quickly removes all hyperlinks in a document, without affecting any other fields:
Sub KillLinks() Do Until ActiveDocument.Hyperlinks.Count = 0 ActiveDocument.Hyperlinks(1).Delete Loop End Sub
Even after running the macro, the formatting issue still remains—the hyperlinks are formatted as blue and underlined. You can get rid of the formatting by using the Find and Replace feature of Word, but how you use it depends on how the hyperlinks were created.
When you are typing in a document and you type some sort of recognizable electronic address (an e-mail address or a URL), Word automatically formats the address using the Hyperlink style. In that case, you can search for any text using the Hyperlink style and replace it without the Hyperlink style. (Remember—this doesn't remove the hyperlink, just the Hyperlink style.)
When you paste information in a document, the hyperlinks are formatted differently; Word doesn't use styles to format them. Instead, it formats the hyperlinks explicitly as blue and underlined. In this case, you need to search explicitly for blue and underlined text and replace it with text that is not blue and not underlined.
Note:
WordTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Word training. (Microsoft Word is the most popular word processing software in the world.) This tip (13244) applies to Microsoft Word 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019, and Word in Microsoft 365. You can find a version of this tip for the older menu interface of Word here: Getting Rid of Many Hyperlinks.
The First and Last Word on Word! Bestselling For Dummies author Dan Gookin puts his usual fun and friendly candor back to work to show you how to navigate Word 2013. Spend more time working and less time trying to figure it all out! Check out Word 2013 For Dummies today!
Got a document that has a whole raft of e-mail address in it? You can easily convert all of them to clickable hyperlinks ...
Discover MoreGot some active links in your document? Do you want to have them activated when you click on them, or do you want to ...
Discover MoreWord maintains a series of URLs and file references in the Insert Hyperlink dialog box. How to clear these lists is a ...
Discover MoreFREE SERVICE: Get tips like this every week in WordTips, a free productivity newsletter. Enter your address and click "Subscribe."
2020-11-20 22:06:37
Meredyth Sawyer
Ever since I've been using 'Word' which is over 30 years, I have never been able to remove hyperlinks from all pictures at the same time with Ctrl+Shift+F9 or Crl+6, only from all text on the same page. Since getting Word 2019, sometimes the 'Remove hyperlink' doesn't come up anymore. Sometimes I remove the hyperlink (or think I have) only to pass over the picture again & find it still there. This happens even when I use 'copy', 'picture U paste ' then 'cut', which is often the only way I can remove a hyperlink if 'remove hyperlink' doesn't show up. I know I can turn off hyperlinks completely in AutoFormat as you Type or AutoFormat but sometimes I want to keep them temporarily to find a web site again. I have never used Ctrl+V to paste into a document. I always use the 'paste' icon/option & I've never tried using the 'U paste' for this but it's not working after the fact, that's for sure. How can I remove hyperlinks from ALL PICTURES at once and how can I be sure to remove a hyperlink from an INDIVIDUAL PICTURE, also.
Got a version of Word that uses the ribbon interface (Word 2007 or later)? This site is for you! If you use an earlier version of Word, visit our WordTips site focusing on the menu interface.
Visit the WordTips channel on YouTube
FREE SERVICE: Get tips like this every week in WordTips, a free productivity newsletter. Enter your address and click "Subscribe."
Copyright © 2024 Sharon Parq Associates, Inc.
Comments