Changing every instance of a font across an entire PowerPoint presentation can take hours if you edit each text box manually. PowerPoint includes a built-in tool that replaces all occurrences of one font with another font in a single operation. This article explains how to use the Replace Fonts dialog to swap fonts across the whole file, including text boxes, tables, and placeholders.
Key Takeaways: Replace Fonts in PowerPoint
- Home > Editing > Replace > Replace Fonts: Opens the dialog that lets you swap one font for another across the entire presentation.
- Replace Fonts dialog > Replace dropdown and With dropdown: Select the font to replace and the replacement font, then click Replace.
- File > Options > Save > Embed fonts in the file: Prevents font substitution when you share the file with someone who does not have the replacement font installed.
How PowerPoint Replace Fonts Works
PowerPoint stores font information separately from text content. Each text element references a font name. The Replace Fonts command scans every text element in the presentation, including slide text boxes, shapes, tables, SmartArt, charts, and notes, and changes the font reference to a new font name.
The tool does not change font size, color, bold, italic, or other formatting. It only changes the typeface. If you replace a serif font like Times New Roman with a sans-serif font like Arial, the text keeps its original formatting attributes. The replacement applies to all slides, the slide master, and the handout master.
No additional software or add-in is required. The feature is available in PowerPoint 2013, PowerPoint 2016, PowerPoint 2019, PowerPoint 2021, and PowerPoint for Microsoft 365. The steps are identical across these versions.
Steps to Replace All Fonts in a PowerPoint Presentation
Follow these steps to replace a font across the entire file at once.
- Open the presentation
Launch PowerPoint and open the file that contains the font you want to replace. Save a backup copy before making changes. - Go to the Home tab
Click the Home tab on the ribbon. This tab is selected by default when you open a presentation. - Open the Replace menu
In the Editing group on the far right of the ribbon, click the arrow next to Replace. A small menu appears with two options: Replace and Replace Fonts. - Select Replace Fonts
Click Replace Fonts from the dropdown menu. The Replace Fonts dialog box opens. - Choose the font to replace
In the Replace dropdown list, select the font you want to change. The list shows all fonts currently used in the presentation. - Choose the replacement font
In the With dropdown list, select the font you want to use instead. The list shows all fonts installed on your system. - Click Replace
Click the Replace button. PowerPoint scans the file and changes every instance of the original font to the new font. A confirmation message shows the number of replacements made. - Repeat for additional fonts
If you need to replace more than one font, repeat steps 5 through 7 for each font pair. - Close the dialog and save
Click Close to exit the Replace Fonts dialog. Save the presentation to keep the changes.
What to Do If the Font You Want to Replace Does Not Appear in the List
The Replace dropdown only shows fonts that are used in the current presentation. If a font is not listed, it means no text element uses that font. Check the slide master, notes, and hidden slides. You can also use the Find tool under Home > Editing > Find to locate text with a specific font name, though this is slower.
Common Mistakes and Limitations When Replacing Fonts
Replace Fonts Does Not Change Fonts in Embedded Objects
Fonts inside embedded objects such as Word documents or Excel charts are not affected by the Replace Fonts command. You must open the embedded object in its source application and change the font there, then update the link in PowerPoint.
Font Replacement Can Break Layout If the New Font Is Much Larger
If the replacement font has a wider character width or larger x-height, text may overflow text boxes or push other elements out of position. After replacing fonts, review each slide for text overflow. Reduce font size manually or adjust text box size as needed.
The Replacement Font Must Be Installed on Your System
The With dropdown only shows fonts that are installed on your computer. If you want to use a font that is not installed, install it first. If you share the presentation with others and they do not have the font, PowerPoint substitutes a default font. To prevent this, embed fonts in the file using File > Options > Save > Embed fonts in the file.
Replace Fonts Does Not Change Fonts in Notes or Handouts
The Replace Fonts tool covers speaker notes and handout masters in most PowerPoint versions. However, if you use an older version, test the replacement on a copy. If notes are not updated, change the font manually in Notes Master view under View > Notes Master.
Undoing a Font Replacement
You can press Ctrl+Z immediately after the replacement to undo it. If you save and close the file, you cannot undo the change. Keep a backup copy of the original file before performing the replacement.
Replace Fonts Dialog vs Manual Formatting: Speed Comparison
| Item | Replace Fonts Dialog | Manual Find and Replace Formatting |
|---|---|---|
| Time for 50-slide deck | Under 1 minute | 30–60 minutes |
| Slides covered | All slides, masters, notes | Only slides you manually edit |
| Font formatting preserved | Size, color, bold, italic unchanged | Must reapply formatting manually |
| Risk of missing elements | Low — scans entire file | High — easy to miss one text box |
The Replace Fonts dialog is the fastest and most reliable way to change fonts across a PowerPoint file. Manual editing is only needed for embedded objects or when the replacement font causes layout problems.
If PowerPoint Still Has Issues After the Main Fix
PowerPoint Does Not Show the Replace Fonts Option
If the Replace Fonts option is grayed out or missing, the file may be in a protected view or compatibility mode. Click File > Info and check if the presentation is marked as Final. Click Edit Anyway to enable editing. If the file is in .ppt format (PowerPoint 97–2003), save it as .pptx using File > Save As > PowerPoint Presentation (.pptx).
Font Replacement Applies to Only One Slide
This happens if you selected text on a single slide before opening the Replace Fonts dialog. Deselect all objects by clicking a blank area of the slide, then repeat the steps. The Replace Fonts command always applies to the entire file when no text is selected.
Replacement Font Looks Different on Another Computer
If the replacement font is not installed on the recipient’s computer, PowerPoint substitutes a different font. To prevent this, embed the font in the file. Go to File > Options > Save, check Embed fonts in the file, and choose Embed all characters. This increases file size but preserves the exact font.
You can now replace every font in a PowerPoint file in seconds using the Replace Fonts dialog. Try using this tool to standardize fonts across a presentation before sharing it with your team. For presentations that will be printed, consider embedding fonts to avoid substitution on systems that lack the font.