Privacy Guide

How to Remove Metadata and Personal Information from Word Documents — Windows and Mac

📅 Updated June 2026 ⏱ 8 min read ✍ Percy Ng

To remove metadata from a Word document: go to File → Info → Check for Issues → Inspect Document, tick all categories, click Inspect, then click Remove All next to each finding. This takes under 60 seconds and removes your name, revision history, tracked changes, and comments in one pass. Read on for the complete method, the Mac version, and what Word's own tool misses.

When you email that document to a client, send it to a recruiter, or submit it to a court, all of that invisible data goes with it.

This guide shows you exactly how to remove it — using Word's built-in tools for single files, and a faster batch method when you have dozens of documents to clean at once.

What Metadata Does a Word Document Actually Contain?

Open any .docx file and you will find far more data than the words on the page. Microsoft Word stores the following by default:

  • Author and Last Modified By — your real name, pulled from your Windows or Microsoft account
  • Company and Organisation — the company name registered in your Office installation
  • Revision count — how many times the document has been saved
  • Total editing time — the cumulative minutes spent editing the file
  • Creation and modification timestamps — including the original creation date even if you rename the file
  • Template path — the full file path of the template used, which can expose internal server structure
  • Custom document properties — arbitrary key/value data added by your tools or organisation
  • Embedded thumbnail — a preview image that may show content from an earlier draft
  • Comments and tracked changes — even if they appear to be resolved or hidden on screen
Real-world example: A law firm once submitted a contract with tracked changes still embedded. The opposing party accepted the document, opened the revision history, and read every internal note the firm had written during drafting. That data was invisible to anyone just reading the PDF printout.

Method 1: Word's Built-In Document Inspector (Free, One File at a Time)

Word includes a tool called the Document Inspector. It finds and removes most categories of metadata. Here is how to use it:

  1. Open the Word document you want to clean.
  2. Click File in the top-left corner.
  3. Click Info in the left panel.
  4. Click Check for Issues, then select Inspect Document.
  5. Make sure all categories are ticked, then click Inspect.
  6. Next to each category that found data, click Remove All.
  7. Click Close, then save your document.

What the Document Inspector Removes

  • Comments, tracked changes, and annotations
  • Document properties and personal information (author, company, manager)
  • Custom XML data
  • Headers, footers, and watermarks (optional)
  • Hidden text and invisible content

What the Document Inspector Does NOT Remove

This is the part most guides skip:

  • The original creation date and edit history timestamps
  • The template file path (in some configurations)
  • Embedded thumbnails in older document formats
  • Metadata baked into embedded objects such as charts or images pasted from Excel

Method 2: Windows File Properties (Quick, Surface-Level Only)

Windows Explorer has a built-in option to remove basic metadata without opening Word at all:

  1. Right-click the .docx file in Windows Explorer.
  2. Select Properties.
  3. Click the Details tab.
  4. Click Remove Properties and Personal Information at the bottom.
  5. Choose Remove the following properties from this file, tick everything, and click OK.

This removes the properties visible in the Details tab — author, company, subject, tags, and comments. It does not touch the deeper metadata inside the document XML, including revision history, tracked changes, or embedded objects. Use this method only for quick, informal sharing.

Method 3: Batch Cleaning Multiple Documents

If you regularly send Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, or PDFs externally, cleaning one file at a time is impractical. The manual process also relies on you remembering every single time.

Real-world example: A freelance consultant discovered that every proposal she had sent for three years contained the name and company of her previous employer in the Author field — because she had been working from a template created on that employer's machine.

For batch processing, Doc Meta Cleaner Pro X handles this automatically — drop an entire folder of documents, see exactly what metadata each file contains (HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW risk badges), and clean everything in one click. Supports .docx, .xlsx, .pptx, and .pdf. Runs 100% offline.

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Excel and PowerPoint: The Same Problem, the Same Fix

The same hidden metadata problem exists in every Office format. Excel files carry cell comments with reviewer names, hidden sheets, and named ranges that expose internal terminology. PowerPoint files carry speaker notes — which often contain frank internal commentary — plus off-slide objects with their own metadata.

To clean manually in Excel or PowerPoint on Windows:

  1. Click File in the top-left corner.
  2. Click Info in the left panel.
  3. Click Check for Issues, then select Inspect Document (or Inspect Workbook / Inspect Presentation).
  4. Tick all categories and click Inspect.
  5. Click Remove All next to each category that found data.

The process is identical across Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. For batch cleaning across multiple files in one go, a dedicated tool handles all three formats automatically.

PDF Metadata

When you export a Word document to PDF, most of the Word metadata is carried across — author, creator application, and timestamps. Word's Document Inspector does not touch PDF metadata. You need either Adobe Acrobat Pro or a dedicated tool to clean PDFs.

How to Remove Metadata from Word on Mac

The steps differ slightly on macOS. Word for Mac has a more limited built-in inspector, but you can still remove the most common personal information:

  1. Open the Word document on your Mac.
  2. Click Tools in the menu bar.
  3. Select Protect Document.
  4. Tick Remove personal information from this file on save.
  5. Click OK, then save the document.

This removes the author name, last saved by, and basic personal properties. However, Mac Word does not offer the full Document Inspector available on Windows — it does not surface revision history, embedded objects, or custom XML data in the same way. For thorough cleaning on Mac, exporting to PDF first and then cleaning the PDF is the most reliable approach.

Word on Mac with Office 365: If you are using Microsoft 365 on a Mac, the Review tab may include a Protect Document option with additional privacy settings depending on your version. The path above works across all current Mac versions of Word.

When Does Metadata Removal Actually Matter?

  • Client deliverables — proposals should not carry previous client names from reused templates
  • Job applications — a CV built on an old template may carry a previous employer's company name
  • Legal submissions — courts and opposing counsel can and do inspect document metadata
  • GDPR compliance — if metadata contains personal data (names, email addresses), that data is in scope
  • Selling templates — any template distributed publicly should be clean of creator information

Frequently Asked Questions

Does removing metadata change the document content?

No. Metadata removal only strips the hidden properties and history. The text, formatting, images, and structure of your document are untouched.

Will the recipient know I removed metadata?

No. There is no flag or indicator that metadata has been cleaned. The document simply has fewer hidden properties.

Does converting to PDF remove Word metadata?

Partially. Converting to PDF removes most Word-specific metadata but replaces it with PDF metadata — including author, creator application, and timestamps. A PDF exported from Word still carries identifying information unless you explicitly clean the PDF afterwards.

Is this covered by GDPR?

If the metadata contains personal data — names, email addresses, or any information that identifies a living person — then yes, it falls within the scope of GDPR. This is particularly relevant for HR documents, client files, and any document shared across organisations.

Does saving a Word document with a new file name remove its metadata?

No. Renaming a file or using Save As with a new name does not remove any metadata. The author name, revision history, tracked changes, and all other hidden properties are copied exactly into the new file. You must use the Document Inspector or a dedicated tool to strip metadata — renaming alone does nothing.

Does this work on Mac?

Yes — see the Mac section above. On macOS, go to Tools → Protect Document → Remove personal information from this file on save. The options are more limited than the Windows version but cover the most common personal properties. For deeper cleaning on Mac, use a dedicated tool or clean the exported PDF.

How do I remove identifying information from a Word document?

Identifying information in Word includes the author name, last modified by, company name, email address embedded in tracked changes, and revision history. Use Word's Document Inspector (File → Info → Check for Issues → Inspect Document) to find and remove all of these in one pass. If you are sharing externally — particularly for legal, HR, or compliance purposes — run the inspector every time before sending.

How do I scrub metadata from an Excel file?

In Excel on Windows: File → Info → Check for Issues → Inspect Workbook. Tick all categories, click Inspect, then Remove All next to any findings. Pay particular attention to Comments and Annotations (which carry reviewer names) and Hidden Worksheets (which may contain sensitive working data). On Mac, Excel's inspector options are more limited — batch cleaning with a dedicated tool is more reliable for compliance purposes.


Want to do this automatically?

Doc Metadata Cleaner Pro X handles batch cleaning in one click — 100% offline, no subscription, no cloud.

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About Beginza — Beginza builds privacy tools for Windows that run entirely on your device. No cloud, no accounts, no subscriptions. Browse all apps at beginza.co.uk.

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Percy Ng

Co-founder of Beginza. Builds privacy tools for Windows that run 100% locally — no cloud, no accounts. All Beginza apps are available on the Microsoft Store.