How to Change Slide Orientation in Google Slides to Portrait

After you use Google Slides to make a presentation, it only takes a few moments to go back in and change a slide’s orientation from landscape to portrait. This process changes the orientation for all the slides in the presentation; there’s no method for doing it for individual slides. Here’s what you need to do to change things around.

Go to Google Docs in a web browser. You can’t do this on an Android or iOS app. Select menu (three lines). Select Slides. Choose the presentation you want to edit. Select File. Select Page setup. You may need to scroll down to see this option. Select the drop-down box currently displaying Widescreen 16:9. This may be a different size, depending on how your presentation is set up. Select Custom. Swap the two numbers listed around to rotate the slide into a vertical position.   Another way to change the slide size in Google Slides is to enter a figure here. We recommend 7. 5 inches by 10 inches if you want to create a portrait image that looks good when printed. Select Apply. The slide has now been correctly moved to the Portrait perspective.

How to Change Slide Orientation to Landscape

Is your presentation set up for Portrait mode and you’re now regretting everything? Don’t worry. It’s just as simple to change your slides back to Landscape perspective. Here’s what to do.

Go to Google Docs. Select menu (three lines). Select Slides. Choose the presentation you want to edit. Select File. Select Page setup. You may need to scroll down to see this option. Select Custom. Swap the two numbers listed around to rotate the slide into a vertical position.   Want to change the size in a different way? Enter a figure here. We recommend 10 inches by 7. 5 inches if you want to create a landscape image that looks good when printed. Select Apply. The slide has now been correctly moved to the Landscape perspective.

When to Use Different Perspectives on Your Presentation

You may be wondering why you need to switch between Portrait and Landscape perspective with your Google Slides presentations. We’ve looked at a few key reasons why it can be worthwhile doing.

Newsletters. If you’re creating a newsletter in Google Slides, a portrait view is often far better for reading than landscape. It looks better for everyone and is far easier to hold too if you’re printing it out. Different posters. Depending on what you’re designing, different posters can look better either in Portrait or Landscape perspective. It’s useful to be able to see which looks better for your design. Infographics. Similarly, if you’re designing an infographic for your presentation, graphs will look better in Landscape while more text-heavy results will look better in Portrait.