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Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Tables > Footnotes for Tables

Footnotes for Tables

Summary: Word includes a powerful feature that allows you to add footnotes and endnotes to your document. What if you want them at the bottom of a table, however? There are a couple of approaches you can try, as described in this tip. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)

Many scholarly documents and research papers require the extensive use of footnotes. How you use footnotes in Word has been covered in detail in other issues of WordTips. You can place footnote markers at any place within your document, including within tables. The footnotes then appear in the regular place, at the bottom of the page, along with your other footnotes.

Some formatting guidelines, however, require that footnotes for tables be handled specially. Namely, that the footnote appear not with the regular text footnotes, but at the end of the table in which the footnote marker appears. For some documents, you may be able to achieve the desired result by inserting a continuous section break immediately after the table and making sure your footnotes are inserted in the table using the "Beneath Text" setting for the Place At option. (Click on the Options button in the Footnotes and Endnotes dialog box to see this option.)

This approach will only work if you have footnotes in your table, and don't have any in the regular document text on that page. If you have a need for footnotes in regular text and in your table, you can simply use regular footnotes for your document text and endnotes for the footnotes in your table. The footnotes should be formatted to appear at the bottom of each page, and the endnotes should be formatted to appear at the end of each section. With the section break right after the table (as noted in the previous paragraph), the endnotes will appear immediately after the table, and any footnotes on the page will appear in the proper place at the bottom of the page.

The real "sticky wicket" comes into play if you need footnotes in your document, separate footnotes in your table, and endnotes at the end of the document. Word has no built-in way to handle such instances. Instead, you must handle the table footnotes manually.

Perhaps the easiest way to manually construct table footnotes is simply include them as part of the table itself. The following general steps describe the process:

  1. Add an extra row at the end of your table. If you use borders on the cells in your table, you can remove the borders for this additional row.
  2. Select all the cells in the row and merge them (choose Merge Cells from the Table menu). The last row should now consist of a single cell spanning the whole width of your table.
  3. Make a copy of the Footnote Reference style and name the copy Tablenote Reference.
  4. Make a copy of the Footnote Text style and name the copy Tablenote Text.
  5. Modify the new styles as necessary to specify how you want your table footnotes to appear.
  6. Select the entire last row of the table and apply the Tablenote Text style to it.
  7. Insert your table footnotes as desired, along with marker characters in the table.
  8. Format the marker characters using the Tablenote Reference style.

There are ways you can autonumber the footnote references in your table. Simply use the SEQ field for your marker, as has been covered in other issues of WordTips.

If you prefer to not use an additional row in your table for your footnotes (for whatever reason), you can instead insert a text box which can then be used to contain the table footnotes.

Tip #1730 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007


Take Control! Experienced users know that styles can make the difference between a plain document and a masterful one. This is the real power behind Word, and the key to that power can be found in WordTips: Styles and Templates.

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