You have a single PowerPoint deck that needs to show multiple visual identities. For example, a company presentation might use one theme for the executive summary and a different theme for each department report. PowerPoint does not allow two themes in one file by default. But you can create the effect of different themes by using section-based formatting and custom slide masters. This article explains how to apply distinct color schemes, fonts, and background designs to different sections of the same presentation.
Key Takeaways: Applying Section-Specific Themes in One Deck
- View > Slide Master > Insert Slide Master: Creates a new master with its own theme for each section.
- Slide Sorter view > Right-click > Add Section: Groups slides so you can apply a different master to each group.
- Home > Layout > Custom layout from a different master: Applies the section-specific master to selected slides.
How PowerPoint Handles Themes and Sections
A theme in PowerPoint is a package of colors, fonts, and effects. A slide master is the top-level slide that stores that theme. You cannot apply two different themes to the same slide master. However, you can add extra slide masters to the same presentation. Each extra master can have its own theme. Sections are just named groups of slides. They do not hold formatting on their own. To give a section a different look, you assign slides in that section to a specific custom master.
The key is to create one slide master per desired theme. Then you apply the correct master to each section. This method works in PowerPoint 2016, 2019, PowerPoint for Microsoft 365, and PowerPoint for the web with some limitations.
Prerequisites Before You Start
You need a presentation that already has at least two sections. If you have not created sections yet, do that first. You also need the theme files for each section. A theme file has a .thmx extension. You can also use built-in themes from PowerPoint. Open the presentation you want to modify. Save a backup copy before starting because adding multiple masters can cause layout shifts.
Steps to Create a Second Slide Master With a Different Theme
- Open Slide Master view
Go to View > Slide Master. The current slide master and its layouts appear in the left pane. - Insert a new slide master
On the Slide Master tab, click Insert Slide Master. A new master appears below the original one. This new master is blank with the default Office theme. - Apply a different theme to the new master
With the new master selected, click Themes on the Slide Master tab. Choose a built-in theme or browse to a .thmx file. The new master now uses that theme. - Customize layouts for the new master
Each master comes with default layouts. You can delete, rename, or modify layouts for the new master. Right-click a layout and choose Rename Layout to give it a descriptive name such as “Section 2 Title.” - Close Slide Master view
Click Close Master View on the Slide Master tab.
Steps to Assign the Second Master to a Specific Section
- Switch to Slide Sorter view
Go to View > Slide Sorter. This view shows all slides and section dividers. - Select all slides in the target section
Click the section bar above the slides you want to change. All slides in that section become selected. - Apply a layout from the new master
Go to Home > Layout. You will see layouts from both masters in the gallery. Click one of the layouts that came from the second master. All selected slides now use that master and its theme. - Repeat for other sections
If you need a third theme, insert another slide master and repeat the process.
What to Do When the Layout Gallery Does Not Show the New Master
Sometimes the Layout gallery only shows layouts from the first master. This happens when you have not applied any layout from the new master to a slide yet. To fix this, go to Slide Master view. Click the new master. On the Slide Master tab, click Preserve. This prevents PowerPoint from removing the unused master. Then close the view and try applying a layout again.
Common Mistakes and Limitations
Theme colors change on slides that use the wrong master
If you apply a layout from Master A to a slide that was created with Master B, the slide might inherit some colors from Master B. To avoid this, always create new slides from the correct master. Use the New Slide dropdown and pick a layout from the desired master.
Animations and transitions do not follow the master switch
Changing the master does not affect animations applied directly to slide objects. You must reapply or adjust those animations manually.
PowerPoint for the web does not support multiple masters
You can view a deck with multiple masters in PowerPoint for the web, but you cannot create or edit masters there. Use the desktop app to set up the themes.
File size increases with each new master
Each slide master adds about 50 KB to 200 KB to the file. If you add many masters, the file size grows noticeably. Delete unused layouts from each master to keep the file lean.
PowerPoint Desktop vs PowerPoint for the Web: Master Handling
| Item | PowerPoint Desktop | PowerPoint for the Web |
|---|---|---|
| Create multiple slide masters | Yes | No |
| Apply different master to sections | Yes, via Layout gallery | No, only default master available |
| Preserve unused masters | Yes, via Preserve button | No |
| View presentations with multiple masters | Yes | Yes, but editing limited |
You can now create a single PowerPoint file that uses different themes for different sections. Start by inserting additional slide masters in Slide Master view. Assign each master to the appropriate section using the Layout gallery. This technique works reliably in the desktop version of PowerPoint. Remember to preserve unused masters so they do not disappear. If you need to share the file with users who only have PowerPoint for the web, tell them to open it in the desktop app to see the full theme separation. For advanced control, explore the Edit Theme dialog under Design > Variants to fine-tune colors and fonts per master.