How to Edit a Template in Word | The Exact File to Open

A Word template is edited by opening the .dotx or .dotm file itself — making changes to the template file directly preserves them for future use.

One wrong click and you’ve edited a document instead of the actual template file — a mistake that makes future documents keep the old design. How to edit a template in Word comes down to one rule: open the template file itself, not a new document based on it. The fix takes about thirty seconds once you know where Microsoft stashes your templates.

Why Editing a New Document Won’t Work

When you double-click a template file, Word creates a fresh document from it. Any changes you make inside that document stay inside that one file. The original .dotx or .dotm template stays untouched, so every new document you create afterward still uses the old layout, styles, and defaults.

To edit a template permanently, you must open the template file directly and save it as the same template type.

How to Open Your Template the Right Way

Microsoft’s current guidance for Word on Windows is straightforward. Inside Word, go to File > Open > This PC and navigate to the Custom Office Templates folder under Documents/My Documents. Select your template, click Open, make your edits, then save and close the file. That’s it — every future document created from that template will reflect your changes. Microsoft’s edit-templates guidance confirms this exact path.

On Windows 11, the right-click menu in File Explorer may hide the “Edit” command. Opening the template from inside Word avoids that issue completely.

Editing a Word Template: The Step Order That Works

Follow this order every time you need to update a template:

  1. Open Word — start from a blank session, not from an existing document.
  2. File > Open > This PC — browse to Custom Office Templates under Documents/My Documents.
  3. Select your template — choose the .dotx or .dotm file and click Open. The title bar should show the template name with “Compatibility Mode” if it was created in an older version.
  4. Make your edits — change styles, content, layout, headers, footers, content controls, or anything else the template needs.
  5. Save and close — use Ctrl+S or File > Save. Word keeps the same template format automatically. Then close the file.

The template is now updated. Any new document you create using File > New > Personal will pull in the current version.

What You Can Edit Inside a Template

Most elements you can adjust in a regular document are editable inside a template — plus a few that only matter for reusable layouts. The table below lists the common template components and how to modify them.

Element How to Edit It Pro Tip
Styles (fonts, colors, spacing) Right-click a style in Home > Modify Changes flow into every future document built from this template
Content controls Developer tab > Controls group Use Properties to set placeholder text and lock settings
Headers and footers Double-click the header or footer area Enable “Different First Page” in Design tab when needed
Page layout Layout tab Set margins, orientation, and page size to match your typical use case
Building blocks Insert > Quick Parts > Building Blocks Organizer Save new ones by selecting content and choosing “Save Selection to Quick Part Gallery”
Watermarks Design tab > Watermark Custom text or image watermarks stay with the template
Macros Developer tab > Macros Macros require saving as .dotm — .dotx does not support them
Page background / color Design tab > Page Color Best for templates used on-screen rather than printed

Why Can’t I Find My Template?

Templates go missing most often because they were saved outside the default folder. Word’s Custom Office Templates folder under Documents/My Documents is the only place the app checks when you use File > New > Personal. If you saved your template to the desktop, a subfolder, or a network drive, Word won’t show it in the personal templates gallery.

To fix it, move the .dotx or .dotm file into the Custom Office Templates folder. On Windows 11, if the simplified right-click menu hides the edit option, open Word first and use File > Open to navigate there.

How to Apply a Template to an Existing Document

You can attach a template to a document you’ve already written. Open the document, go to the Developer tab (enable it at File > Options > Customize Ribbon if it’s hidden), click Document Template, choose Attach, and browse to your .dotx or .dotm file. Check Automatically update document styles to pull in the template’s style definitions, then click OK.

Without that checkbox checked, only the template’s content controls and building blocks will be available, not its styles.

Common Template-Editing Mistakes

Even experienced Word users slip up on a few recurring traps. The table below covers the most frequent ones and how to sidestep each.

Mistake Why It’s a Problem The Fix
Editing a document instead of the template file Changes apply to only that one document, not future ones Open the .dotx or .dotm file directly — not a document created from it
Saving as .docx instead of .dotx or .dotm File becomes a regular document, no longer functions as a template Use Save As and choose Word Template or Word Macro-Enabled Template
Not saving after edits All changes are lost when Word closes Hit Ctrl+S after each significant edit
Leaving the template open after editing Future documents may still reference the unedited version in memory Close the template file after saving
Looking in the wrong folder Word won’t show the template in New > Personal Store templates in Custom Office Templates under Documents/My Documents
Using the simplified Windows 11 right-click menu “Edit” command may be hidden or missing Open the template from inside Word instead of File Explorer
Forgetting to enable the Developer tab Can’t access content controls, macros, or document template attachment File > Options > Customize Ribbon and check Developer

Quick Checklist for Editing a Word Template

Run through these four steps every time you need to update a template and want to avoid the common traps.

  • Open the .dotx or .dotm file directly — not a document based on it. Use File > Open > This PC > Custom Office Templates.
  • Make your changes — styles, content controls, layout, headers, watermarks, or macros.
  • Save in the correct format — Word keeps the template type automatically when you save. For macro-enabled templates, verify it saved as .dotm.
  • Close the file — then create a test document from File > New > Personal to confirm the edits applied.

That sequence takes about a minute and guarantees every future document starts from the right version.

References & Sources

  • Microsoft Support. “Edit templates.” Official documentation for opening, modifying, and saving Word templates on Windows.