Editing a Word drop-down list uses the Developer tab’s Properties panel to add, remove, or reorder items in seconds.
A drop-down list in Word keeps forms clean and data consistent — until the options need updating. Knowing how to edit a drop-down list in Word means you can add new choices, remove outdated ones, or fix typos without rebuilding the whole form. The process is the same across Word 2016, 2019, 2021, and Microsoft 365, and every tool lives in the Developer tab.
What You Need Before Editing
Editing a drop-down requires the desktop version of Word. The free web version (Word for the browser) and mobile apps hide the Developer tab entirely, so changes aren’t possible there. You also need edit permissions on the document — if the file is in View-Only mode or locked by a protection policy, the editing controls stay grayed out.
The drop-down itself must be one of two control types: the modern Drop-Down List Content Control (added from the Developer tab’s Controls group) or the older Drop-Down Form Field (listed under Legacy Tools). Each has its own editing method, and the steps differ slightly.
Can’t Find the Developer Tab? Enable It in Two Steps
The Developer tab is hidden by default in every modern Word version. Turning it on takes about 15 seconds.
- Go to File > Options.
- In the Word Options window, select Customize Ribbon on the left.
- Under Main Tabs on the right, check the box for Developer.
- Click OK. The Developer tab now appears in the ribbon between View and Help.
The tab stays visible across sessions, so you only do this once.
Step-by-Step: Edit a Drop-Down List Content Control
This is the standard method for the modern Content Control — the type most users add today. It uses the ribbon buttons, not a right-click menu.
- Click the drop-down list in your document to select it. A border appears around the control when it’s active.
- Go to the Developer tab and find the Controls group.
- Click Properties. The Content Control Properties dialog opens.
- In the Drop-Down List Properties section at the bottom:
— To add an item, click Add, type the name in the Display Name field, and click OK.
— To remove an item, select it in the list and click Remove.
— To reorder items, select one and use Move Up or Move Down. - Click OK to save. The list updates immediately with your changes.
One quirk worth knowing: there is no “Rename” button. To change an item’s name, delete it and add the corrected version. Microsoft’s official form documentation confirms this as the intended workflow.
Editing the Legacy Drop-Down Form Field
If the drop-down came from an older template or was inserted using Legacy Tools, the edit path is different. Legacy form fields use a right-click menu rather than the ribbon’s Properties button.
- Right-click the drop-down box in your document.
- Select Properties from the context menu.
- In the Drop-Down Form Field Options dialog, type a new item name in the field and click Add.
- Click OK to save.
The legacy field stores items differently, and the Move Up/Down controls appear in a different order. The key difference: you access properties by right-clicking, not by selecting the control and using the ribbon.
Editing a Drop-Down List in Word: Content Control vs. Legacy Fields
Choosing the right edit method depends on which control type is in your document. The table below breaks down the differences.
| Feature | Drop-Down List Content Control | Legacy Drop-Down Form Field |
|---|---|---|
| How to access properties | Select control, click Properties in ribbon | Right-click the field, select Properties |
| Add items | Add button in Drop-Down List Properties | Type name, click Add in Form Field Options |
| Remove items | Select item, click Remove | Select item, press Delete or Remove |
| Reorder items | Move Up / Move Down buttons | Move arrows in the dialog |
| Rename support | Not available — delete and re-add | Not available — delete and re-add |
| Cross-platform behavior | Works on Windows and macOS | May not render correctly on macOS |
| Best for | New forms, shared documents, modern Word | Legacy templates, backward compatibility |
If you’re unsure which type is in your document, click it and check the ribbon. If the Properties button lights up in the Controls group, it’s a Content Control. If nothing happens, try right-clicking — the legacy field responds to the context menu.
Common Mistakes When Editing Drop-Down Lists
A few recurring issues trip up most users. Here’s what to watch for and how to fix each one.
| Issue | Why It Happens | How to Fix It |
|---|---|---|
| Developer tab is missing | Hidden by default in Word | Enable it via File > Options > Customize Ribbon |
| No “Rename” button found | Word’s interface doesn’t include one | Delete the item and add it with the corrected name |
| Changes don’t stick | Form protection is active | Go to Developer > Restrict Editing and stop protection |
| Right-click doesn’t open properties | You’re using a Content Control, not a legacy field | Select the control and use the ribbon’s Properties button |
| List items are grayed out | Document is in View-Only or restricted mode | Save a copy with edit permissions enabled |
Most of these are one-click fixes once you know what you’re looking at. The confusion between control types causes the most lost time.
Protecting Your Drop-Down List After Editing
Once the list is updated, you may want to lock the form so users can fill it in but not change the structure. Word’s built-in protection handles this cleanly.
- Go to the Developer tab > Protect group.
- Click Restrict Editing.
- In the pane that opens, check Allow only this type of editing in the document.
- Select Filling in forms from the dropdown.
- Click Yes, Start Enforcing Protection. Set a password if needed.
This keeps the drop-down list functional while preventing anyone from adding, removing, or reordering the items. To edit the list again later, stop protection using the same Restrict Editing pane.
Editing a Word Drop-Down List — Start to Finish
The whole process fits into three steps regardless of which control type your document uses. Enable the Developer tab if it’s not visible, open the Properties dialog for your specific control type, and use Add, Remove, and Move Up/Down to arrange the items. The one limitation to remember is the missing Rename button — a quick delete-and-re-add takes care of it.
For Microsoft 365 subscribers and perpetual-license users on Word 2016 and later, these steps work identically across Windows and macOS. The web version remains the one exception, but the desktop tools cover every real-world editing need.
References & Sources
- Microsoft. “Create a form in Word that users can complete or print.” Official documentation covering drop-down list creation, editing, and form protection.
