Software & Apps > MS Office How to Insert Different Page Orientations in Word 2013 There are a couple of ways to accomplish this By Rebecca Johnson Rebecca Johnson Freelance Contributor Rebecca Johnson is a former freelance contributor to Lifewire and a Microsoft Office Certified Master Instructor who specializes in Microsoft Office products. lifewire's editorial guidelines Updated on March 11, 2021 Reviewed by Ryan Perian Reviewed by Ryan Perian Western Governors University Ryan Perian is a certified IT specialist who holds numerous IT certifications and has 12+ years' experience working in the IT industry support and management positions. lifewire's editorial guidelines Tweet Share Email Tweet Share Email MS Office Word Excel Powerpoint Outlook What to Know Insert a Section Break at the beginning of where you want a different orientation: Go to Page Layout > Breaks > Next Page.Then, go to the Page Setup Launcher, click Portrait or Landscape, then click Apply to > Selected text > OK. Or, let MS Word insert section breaks: Click Page Layout Launcher, select Portrait or Landscape, click Selected Text > OK. This article explains how to use different orientations in your Microsoft Word 2013 documents. Portrait is a vertical layout and landscape is a horizontal layout. By default, Word opens in portrait orientation, but you may want part of the document to appear in landscape orientation or vice versa. Insert Section Breaks and Set the Orientation Alistair Berg/Digital Vision/Getty Images Set the breaks first and then set the orientation. In this method, you don't let Word decide where the breaks fall. In order to accomplish this, insert a Next Page Section Break at the start and end of the text, table, picture, or another object, and then set the orientation. Insert a Section Break at the beginning of the area that you want to have a different orientation: Select the Page Layout tab.Click the Breaks drop-down menu in the Page Setup section.Select Next Page in the Section Breaks section.Move to the end of the section and repeat the above steps to set a section break at the end of the material that will appear in an alternate orientation.Click the Page Setup Launcher button on the Page Layout tab in the Page Setup group.Click Portrait or Landscape on the Margins tab in the Orientation section.Select Section in the Apply To drop-down list.Click the OK button. Let Word Insert Section Breaks and Set the Orientation Microsoft By letting Microsoft Word 2013 insert section breaks, you save mouse clicks, but you have no idea where Word is going to place the section breaks. The main problem with letting Microsoft Word place the section breaks is if you miss-select your text. If you do not highlight the entire paragraph, multiple paragraphs, images, table, or other items, Microsoft Word moves the unselected items onto another page. So if you decide to go this route, be careful when selecting the items you want. Select the text, pages, images, or paragraphs that you want to change to portrait or landscape orientation. Carefully highlight all the material you want to appear on a page or pages with a different orientation from the rest of the document.Click the Page Layout Launcher button on the Page Layout tab in the Page Setup group.Click Portrait or Landscape on the Margins tab in the Orientation section.Select Selected Text in the Apply To drop-down list.Click the OK button. Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Get the Latest Tech News Delivered Every Day Subscribe Tell us why! Other Not enough details Hard to understand Submit