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How to Count Words in Any Document (5 Methods)

By The IT Hustle Team

✨ AI-Assisted Content

This article was generated with AI assistance and reviewed by our team for accuracy and quality. All technical information and examples have been verified.

Word count matters more than most people think. Whether you're hitting a blog post target, staying under an email character limit, meeting an essay requirement, or checking that your resume fits on one page — knowing exactly how many words you've written is surprisingly important.

Here are five methods to count words in any document, from the simplest click to a one-line shell command. Pick the one that fits your workflow.

Method 1: Microsoft Word (Built-In)

The easiest method if you're already in Word:

Windows/Mac:

Review tab → Word Count

Or just look at the bottom status bar — word count is always visible.

To count words in a specific section:

Select the text first, then check the status bar — it shows "X of Y words"

Word also shows pages, characters (with/without spaces), paragraphs, and lines. It's the most detailed built-in counter available.

Method 2: Google Docs (Built-In)

Google Docs makes it simple:

Tools → Word count

Keyboard shortcut: Ctrl+Shift+C (Windows) / Cmd+Shift+C (Mac)

Pro tip: Check "Display word count while typing" for a live counter in the bottom-left corner.

Like Word, you can select specific text to count only that selection. Google Docs shows pages, words, characters, and characters without spaces.

Method 3: Command Line (wc)

If you're comfortable with the terminal, the wc command (word count) is the fastest option. It works on macOS, Linux, and Windows (via WSL or Git Bash).

Count words in a file:

wc -w document.txt

Count lines, words, and characters:

wc document.txt

Count words across multiple files:

wc -w *.md

Count words from clipboard (macOS):

pbpaste | wc -w

The wc command is particularly useful for counting words across an entire project — like all the Markdown files in a docs folder.

Method 4: Code Snippets (Python & JavaScript)

When you need word counting as part of a script or application, here's how to do it programmatically.

Python

# Simple word count

text = "Your document text goes here"

word_count = len(text.split())

print(f"Words: {word_count}")

# Read from file

with open("document.txt") as f:

words = len(f.read().split())

JavaScript

// Simple word count

const text = "Your document text goes here";

const wordCount = text.trim().split(/\s+/).filter(Boolean).length;

// With reading time estimate

const readingTime = Math.ceil(wordCount / 200); // ~200 WPM average

Watch out for edge cases

Simple split() methods can miscount on multiple spaces, newlines, tabs, and empty strings. The regex approach (/\s+/) handles these better. For production use, also consider hyphenated words and contractions.

Method 5: Online Word Counter (Fastest)

When you just need a quick count — no file to open, no terminal to launch — paste your text into an online word counter. The best ones give you:

  • Word count — the basics
  • Character count — with and without spaces (useful for Twitter/LinkedIn limits)
  • Sentence count — for readability analysis
  • Reading time estimate — critical for blog posts and documentation

Our free Word Counter runs entirely in your browser — no data is sent to any server. Paste your text, get instant stats.

Which Method Should You Use?

ScenarioBest Method
Already in Word/DocsBuilt-in counter (Methods 1-2)
Counting files in a projectCommand line wc (Method 3)
Building a feature that counts wordsCode snippet (Method 4)
Quick count of any pasted textOnline tool (Method 5)

For most people most of the time, pasting into a free online word counter is the fastest path from "how long is this?" to an answer. No installs, no commands, no code.

Need more text tools? Check out our Word Counter, Diff Checker, and the full free tools directory. Also read 10 Free Online Developer Tools You'll Use Every Day.

IT
The IT Hustle Team

We build free developer tools and write about AI, automation, and developer productivity. 100 tools, 40 articles, and an AI Prompt Engine — all built to help workers navigate the AI era. Published by Salty Rantz LLC.

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