Word page numbers sometimes restart at 1 in the middle of a section where they should continue sequentially. This happens because each section break in Word can carry its own page-numbering settings, and the default behavior for a new section is to restart numbering at 1. This article explains the exact cause, shows how to inspect and correct the numbering settings for each section, and covers related issues such as missing page numbers or numbers that skip values.
Key Takeaways: Fixing Page Number Restarts at Section Breaks
- Insert > Page Number > Format Page Numbers > Continue from previous section: Forces the current section to use the same numbering sequence as the prior section.
- Insert > Page Number > Format Page Numbers > Start at: Manually sets a specific starting number for the current section, overriding the default restart.
- Unlink header/footer from previous section: Required before changing page number format; otherwise the change applies to all sections.
Why Word Restarts Page Numbers at a Section Break
A section break divides a document into independent areas. Each section can have its own headers, footers, margins, and page-numbering rules. When you insert a section break, Word automatically sets the new section to restart page numbering at 1. This is by design, but it becomes a problem when you want continuous numbering across all sections.
The cause is always the page-number format setting for the second section. The setting is either “Start at: 1” or “Start at: 0” depending on your version. The fix is to change that setting to “Continue from previous section” or to manually set the correct start value.
A second common cause is linked headers and footers. If the header or footer in the second section is linked to the previous section, changing the page number format in one section changes it in all linked sections. You must unlink the header or footer before adjusting the numbering.
Steps to Fix Page Numbers That Restart at a Section Break
Method 1: Change the Page Number Format to Continue From Previous Section
- Open the header or footer in the problem section
Double-click inside the header or footer area on any page after the section break where numbering restarts incorrectly. This activates the Header & Footer tab on the ribbon. - Break the link to the previous section
On the Header & Footer tab, click Link to Previous to deselect it. The button should appear unhighlighted. This prevents changes from affecting earlier sections. - Open the Page Number Format dialog
Click Page Number on the Header & Footer tab, then select Format Page Numbers. - Select Continue from previous section
In the Page Number Format dialog, under Page numbering, choose Continue from previous section. Click OK. - Verify the numbering sequence
Scroll through the document to confirm that page numbers now flow continuously across the section break. If the number is still wrong, repeat steps 1–4 for each subsequent section.
Method 2: Manually Set the Correct Starting Number
- Open the header or footer in the problem section
Double-click in the header or footer area after the section break where numbers restart. - Unlink from previous section
Click Link to Previous to break the connection. - Open Format Page Numbers
Click Page Number > Format Page Numbers. - Enter the correct start value
Select Start at and type the number that should appear on the first page of the current section. For example, if the previous section ends on page 12, type 13. Click OK. - Check all sections
Repeat for every section that has a wrong starting number. Use the same logic: add the last page number of the previous section plus one.
Method 3: Remove Unwanted Section Breaks
- Show all formatting marks
Press Ctrl+Shift+8 or click the Show/Hide button in the Paragraph group on the Home tab. This displays section breaks as double-dotted lines with the label “Section Break.” - Identify the unwanted section break
Look for a section break that does not serve a structural purpose, such as one that was inserted accidentally. - Delete the section break
Place the cursor just before the section break and press Delete. Word merges the two sections and applies the formatting of the second section to the combined area. After deletion, check page numbers and adjust the format if needed.
If Page Numbers Still Restart After the Main Fix
Page Numbers Jump by More Than One or Skip Values
This occurs when a section uses a different page-number format, such as Roman numerals for a preface and Arabic numbers for the body. The fix is to set each section to the same number format. Open Format Page Numbers for each section and choose the same Number format (1, 2, 3 or i, ii, iii). Then set Continue from previous section.
Page Numbers Are Missing After a Section Break
A section break can reset headers and footers to blank if the new section has a different header/footer configuration. To restore page numbers, double-click in the header or footer area of the problem section, unlink from previous, and reinsert the page number field using Page Number > Current Position or Page Number > Top of Page.
Numbering Resets After Saving and Reopening
This is rare but can happen if the document contains corrupt section formatting. The most reliable fix is to open the document in Word Online or in Safe Mode (hold Ctrl while starting Word) and reapply the page number format. If the problem persists, copy all content except the final section break into a new document.
Word Section Types and Page Number Behavior
| Section Break Type | Default Page Number Behavior | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Next Page | Restarts at 1 | Chapter starts on new page with independent numbering |
| Continuous | Restarts at 1 | Column layout change without page break |
| Even Page | Restarts at 1 | Book formatting where chapters begin on even-numbered pages |
| Odd Page | Restarts at 1 | Book formatting where chapters begin on odd-numbered pages |
All four section break types default to restarting page numbers at 1. The fix is identical for each type: use the Format Page Numbers dialog to change the setting to Continue from previous section or manually set the correct start value.
You can now control exactly where page numbers restart and ensure they flow continuously across section breaks. After applying the fix, test by scrolling through the entire document and verifying that numbers increment by one at each boundary. For documents with many sections, create a macro that applies “Continue from previous section” to all sections at once: record a macro while performing the steps above on one section, then run it on each subsequent section. This eliminates repetitive manual work in long reports and theses.