This is a small tip, but so exciting that I couldn’t resist sharing (nerd alert…). You probably have a feature-rich word-counting tool, or a TM tool that does complicated word counts. But let’s say that you want to do a quick-and-dirty word count of a bunch of files without opening them one by one. Like say this morning, a client e-mailed me 23 Word files and said “Don’t sink a whole lot of time into this, but roughly how long and how much?”…that kind of thing. Here’s your solution, at least in Windows:
- In Windows Explorer, navigate to the folder
- Right-click in the folder window, and select View, then Details
- Right-click on any of the column headers in the folder window, for example “Name,” “Date modified,” etc.
- Click “More”
- Tick the “Word count” box in the list of options (visual aid below)
This will add a “Word count” column to your folder view, and the word count for any countable file will be displayed, like this:
How exciting! This is a mashup of tips I culled from various forums, and works for all countable files on Windows 7. If anyone has a procedure for other Windows versions or for Mac, feel free to share it.
Wow! Thank you so much for this tip, Corinne. 🙂
What I can see displayed above is a screen shot of a directory with word count attribute header, but how can we produce the same result on paper, ie. how can we generate a report with chosen headers like “Name”, “Date created”, “Word count”
Hi Tam, I have a script that will extract the file name and word count (not the other columns though). Let me know if you want it.
Could I get a copy of that script by any chance? I’ve been trying to figure out how to do that all day and only got the file name so far.
Wow – this is very cool, Corinne; thanks for sharing.
Great tip! I (still) use Windows XP and the word count isn’t one of the options there.
It doesn’t work for Windows 8!
Thanks! That will be useful for Word files. 🙂
(Now if someone could just figure out how to do the same thing with PDF’s, too.)
It does work for Windows 8. Shame it doesn’t work for OpenOffice documents though.
This doesn’t count words. It counts white spaces between text strings.
And that is a rather key difference when you deal with languages that don’t use spaces like most Western languages.
A strange failure for a supposedly international OS.
This is true. But it serves its purpose of having a rough idea of how many words you’ll be dealing with. Just add 10% more.
Yes, I am truly a nerd because that made my day (possibly my week), thank you!
Excellent! I’ve been using an actual software called Practicount but this is even faster,,, (Btw @Stephen Practicount *does* do PDFs and PPTS and Excels)
Please don’t trust this as being in any way useful. The word counts are wildly inaccurate. One file I just tested showed 277 words in Explorer and 451 in Word, for instance. I would strongly advise you to do your own tests and consider withdrawing this advice.
Thanks Marc! I do agree that it’s a “use at your own risk” step, but for the files I counted, the word counts were the same in Explorer and Word.
First of all, thank you for sharing, but under Windows 7, it worked with 1 document out of 5 tested, the word count within MS Word seems to be different from the one showed in the directory. Any ideas why?
Great tip, thanks Corinne! I confirm it does work in Windows 8.
Great tip! Recently I’ve got exactly the same situation – I had to quickly calculate how much time I will need to translate a pack of Word files. After a quick search, I downloaded a small app “Count Anything” and it worked very well. It specifies the number of words, characters, characters without spaces, numer of Asian and Non Asian characters. Stephen, apart from having a drag and drop interface, it is also able to calculate the number of words in a PDF file.
Thank you very much for this tip!
What I do when I need to know how many words there are in a large number of files quickly is import them all into MemoQ and run a word count. It is very fast (I normally have MemoQ open all the time anyway) and of course it also shows you how many repetitions there are too.
This is great to get a rough idea of a word count despite it not being the same as Word’s own count (as others have mentioned).
If anyone wants to keep the word count column on permanent display in Windows Explorer, here’s how to do it:
[Win 8 and 8.1]
View tab>Options>Change Folder and Search Options.
Click the view tab and enable “Apply to folders”. OK.
[Win 7]
Click Organize>Folder and Search Options>View>Apply to folders
I recommend AnyCount because it has an option to include headers and footers (sadly missing in Word itself), and, of course, a total word count for a batch of files.
Thanks! This is a great piece of advice but I found that the word counts given this way are not 100% accurate but close to the actual word count of the files.
Hi, I use Windows 8 and my selected language is Dutch: there is no listing of ‘Word count’ in Dutch, unfortunately
Figured out a way to make the word count in the column accurate. Before your last save, go to the review tab and click the word count button. Then save the document. After that, the word count in explorer is the same as in the document.
It works ! Thank you dbvirago, you have saved my day !
Thansk for this! Great, easy solution.
hi dbvirago, it might have worked up for you, not for anyone else. Tried on several computers. does not work that way 🙁
You just saved hours from my life. THANK YOU! I am currently putting my translation log together and came up with a bunch of word files in one folder. I googled it and your tip appeared first in the results. AMAZING tip, thank you Corinne!
Great, glad it was helpful!
Tks!!! Was a helpful tip!
Hi,
Thank you for the share. However, its showing the wrong total word count for the files. The file is 852 words but its showing 747. I deleted the headings and the title to check if it wasn’t counting them, but to no avail.
Any ideas?
Thanks.
does anyone know how to do this in windows 10?
Thanks, Clare. I haven’t tried it in Windows 10, but perhaps someone else has?
Thanks — never saw this before. However, not working in Windows 10. There is a checkbox for word count in File Explorer, but it’s still not displaying word counts, just an empty column. Microsoft says I need Word installed — and I have it. So I have no clue why it’s not working. 🙁
Hmm. That would be one for MS support…sorry to hear about that!
Had the same problem with Windows 10 not showing the folder word count, so I opened the folder and checked word count for all the documents and it came up with numbers beside each file; however, they were incorrect according to the files I had already opened and obtained word counts for. Clearly not a useful tool in this context.
As someone has already mentioned it, please don’t use those wordcounts. It’s easy to demonstrate that they are wrong with a new Word document.
Thank you for this tip! I am a translator and this is a very useful tool. It does work on Windows 10..took me a while to figure out. All you have to do is right-click on any of the headings in the folder, like Date Modified etc and then follow the instructions above. Hope that helps.
Just noticed that all the female responders Thanked Corrine for her suggestion, which she always stated was a rough count. Couldn’t help but notice all of the male contributors complained and went out of their way to ridicule the suggestion. Why is that the case Gentlemen?
Thanks for posting this! It definitely does work in Windows 10, BUT …
1. To make the count accurate, you first need to open the file in Word, do a word count and then save the file.
2. The word count you will then see in File Explorer is the count that Word gives if you uncheck the “Include textboxes, footnotes and endnotes” option in the Word Count dialog, so it will probably be slightly low.
Hello, I know this is an old post, but I just found it on Google in 2023 and it’s still very helpful. I have lots of word doc in a folder and kept delaying opening each one to count the words myself, you’re a life saver and total time-saver with this easy yet effective trick. Thank you!