Struggling to read text on your Windows screen? You’re not alone. Whether you’re dealing with eye strain, working on a high-resolution monitor, or just need bigger text, Windows gives you several ways to adjust text size without breaking your screen layout.
Quick answer: You can change text size in Windows through Settings > Accessibility > Text size, or by adjusting display scaling in Settings > System > Display. The first method changes only text, while the second scales everything on your screen.
Let’s walk through every method, so you can pick what works best for your situation.

Why Text Size Matters
Small text causes eye strain, headaches, and productivity loss. High-resolution displays (1440p, 4K) often show tiny text by default. Your eyes shouldn’t work harder than necessary.
Windows 10 and 11 offer built-in tools to fix this. You don’t need third-party software. The trick is knowing which setting to use and when.
Method 1: Change Text Size Only (Recommended)
This method increases text size across Windows without enlarging icons, buttons, or images. It’s the cleanest solution for most people.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Open Settings – Press
Windows key + Ior click Start > Settings - Go to Accessibility – Click “Accessibility” in the left sidebar
- Select Text size – Click “Text size” under the Vision section
- Adjust the slider – Drag the slider from 100% up to 225%
- Preview changes – Watch the sample text above the slider
- Apply – Click “Apply” when you’re satisfied
What This Changes
- Menu text in File Explorer
- System dialog boxes
- Most application text
- Web browser interface text (not webpage content)
What This Doesn’t Change
- Icons
- Images
- Buttons
- Webpage content (that’s controlled separately)
Pro tip: Start at 125% and adjust from there. Going above 150% may cause text overlap in some older programs.
Method 2: Scale Everything (Display Scaling)
If you want everything bigger—text, icons, buttons, images, use display scaling instead. This is better for high-DPI monitors.
How to Adjust Display Scaling
- Open Settings – Press
Windows key + I - Click System – Then select “Display”
- Find Scale – Look for “Scale & layout” section
- Choose percentage – Select from dropdown: 100%, 125%, 150%, 175%, or 200%
- Sign out – Some apps need you to sign out and back in
Common Scaling Options
| Screen Resolution | Recommended Scaling | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 1920×1080 (Full HD) | 100% – 125% | Standard monitors 24″ or smaller |
| 2560×1440 (2K) | 125% – 150% | 27″ monitors |
| 3840×2160 (4K) | 150% – 200% | 4K displays, high-DPI screens |
Custom Scaling (Advanced)
Need an exact percentage like 135%?
- Go to Settings > System > Display
- Click “Scale” dropdown
- Select “Custom scaling”
- Enter your percentage (100-500)
- Click the checkmark
- Sign out and back in
Warning: Custom scaling can cause blurry text in some apps. Test it first.
Method 3: Change Browser Text Size
Websites too small? Your browser has separate zoom controls.
For Chrome, Edge, and Firefox
- Zoom in: Press
Ctrland+(plus key) - Zoom out: Press
Ctrland-(minus key) - Reset zoom: Press
Ctrland0(zero)
Permanent Browser Settings
Microsoft Edge:
- Click the three dots (Settings menu)
- Go to Settings > Appearance
- Find “Font size” and adjust
- Or set default page zoom under “Page zoom”
Google Chrome:
- Click three dots > Settings
- Go to Appearance
- Adjust “Font size” (Very small to Very large)
- Set “Page zoom” for default zoom level
Firefox:
- Click menu button > Settings
- Scroll to “Language and Appearance”
- Adjust under “Zoom” or “Fonts and Colors”
Learn more about browser accessibility at Microsoft’s accessibility guide.
Method 4: Change Text Size in Specific Apps
Some programs have their own text size settings.
Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint)
- Zoom slider: Bottom-right corner of the window
- View tab: Click “View” > “Zoom” > select percentage
- Default font size: File > Options > General > change default font
File Explorer
- Open File Explorer
- Click “View” tab
- Select “Large icons,” “Medium icons,” or “Small icons”
- For text only, use Method 1 above
Notepad
- Open Notepad
- Click “View” > “Zoom”
- Choose “Zoom in” or “Zoom out”
- Or click “View” > “Font” to change permanently
Method 5: ClearType Text Tuning
Blurry text? ClearType makes text sharper on LCD screens.
Enable ClearType
- Type “ClearType” in Windows search
- Click “Adjust ClearType text”
- Check “Turn on ClearType”
- Click “Next”
- Follow the wizard (select clearest text samples)
- Click “Finish”
This doesn’t change size but makes text easier to read.
Windows 10 vs Windows 11 Differences
Both versions work similarly, with minor interface changes.
Windows 11
- Settings > Accessibility > Text size
- More streamlined interface
- Better scaling for modern apps
Windows 10
- Settings > Ease of Access > Display > Make text bigger
- Some older scaling issues with third-party apps
- Less consistent across programs
The core functionality is identical. Both use the same slider for text size adjustments.
Troubleshooting Common Problems
Text Looks Blurry After Scaling
Solution: Disable custom scaling and use standard percentages (100%, 125%, 150%). Then run ClearType tuner.
For persistent blurring:
- Right-click desktop > Display settings
- Scroll down and click “Advanced scaling settings”
- Turn on “Let Windows try to fix apps so they’re not blurry”
Some Apps Don’t Respect Text Size Changes
Solution: Older programs may ignore Windows text settings. Options:
- Use display scaling instead (Method 2)
- Check the app’s own settings menu
- Right-click app shortcut > Properties > Compatibility > “Override high DPI scaling behavior”
Text Overlaps or Gets Cut Off
Solution: You’ve scaled too high for that app. Lower the text size slider to 125% or 150%. Update the app if possible—newer versions handle scaling better.
Can’t See the Apply Button
Solution: If you’ve made text too large, you can’t see the Apply button. Press Tab key multiple times until Apply is highlighted, then press Enter.
Keyboard Shortcuts for Quick Adjustments
Speed up your workflow with these shortcuts:
- Windows Magnifier:
Windows key + Plus sign(zoom entire screen) - Turn off Magnifier:
Windows key + Esc - Browser zoom in:
Ctrl + Plus sign - Browser zoom out:
Ctrl + Minus sign - Reset browser zoom:
Ctrl + 0
Best Practices for Eye Comfort
Bigger text helps, but combine it with these tips:
- Position your monitor correctly – Top of screen at or below eye level, 20-26 inches away
- Use the 20-20-20 rule – Every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds
- Adjust brightness – Match your screen brightness to your room lighting
- Enable Dark Mode – Reduces eye strain in low light (Settings > Personalization > Colors)
- Take breaks – Stand up and move every hour
Microsoft provides detailed guidance on reducing eye strain while using devices.
Which Method Should You Use?
Choose based on your needs:
| Situation | Best Method |
|---|---|
| Just need text bigger | Method 1: Text size slider |
| Using 4K or high-DPI monitor | Method 2: Display scaling |
| Only websites are too small | Method 3: Browser zoom |
| One program has tiny text | Method 4: App-specific settings |
| Text looks fuzzy | Method 5: ClearType tuning |
Most people should start with Method 1 (text size slider). It’s simple, reversible, and doesn’t mess with your layout.
Summary
Changing text size in Windows is straightforward once you know where to look. The Accessibility text size slider is your best first option—it increases text without distorting your screen layout.
For high-resolution displays, display scaling (125% to 200%) works better and scales everything proportionally. Browser zoom handles websites separately, and individual apps often have their own text settings.
Don’t accept eye strain as normal. Windows gives you the tools to customize your display. Start with small adjustments, test for a few hours, and fine-tune until reading feels comfortable.
Your eyes will thank you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I change text size without changing everything else?
Yes. Go to Settings > Accessibility > Text size and adjust the slider. This changes only text, leaving icons, images, and buttons at their original size. It works in Windows 10 and 11.
Why does text look blurry after I change the scaling?
Blurry text happens when apps don’t properly support high-DPI displays. Fix it by: using standard scaling percentages (125%, 150%, 175%), running the ClearType tuner, or enabling “Let Windows try to fix apps” in Advanced scaling settings.
What’s the difference between text size and display scaling?
Text size changes only text across Windows. Display scaling changes everything—text, icons, buttons, images—by a percentage. Use text size for minor adjustments, scaling for high-resolution monitors.
Will changing text size affect my games?
No. Games run in fullscreen mode with their own resolution settings. Windows text size and display scaling don’t affect in-game graphics. Adjust game settings separately through the game’s options menu.
How do I reset text size to default?
Go to Settings > Accessibility > Text size and drag the slider back to 100%. Click Apply. For display scaling, go to Settings > System > Display and set Scale to 100% (or the recommended percentage for your monitor).
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