Best for online collaboration: Google Docs
Best for precise formatting: Microsoft Word
Microsoft Word and Google Docs are the most popular word processors used today. Both are near-ubiquitous and reliable for knowledge workers and corporate organizations. While both have the same basic functionality, they may be used under slightly different circumstances:
Pricing | Offline Work | Generative AI | Collaboration | Document Templates | Advanced Formatting | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Google Docs | Free with a personal email address or starting at $6 per month per user for a business account. | Yes, with the Google Docs Offline Chrome extension. | Google Gemini is available in Docs for business accounts for an additional fee. | Easily invite coworkers to view, edit or comment on documents online. | Yes | Add tables, add eSignatures, add variables, change paragraph styles, add indents and align margins, adjust paragraph spacing, add footnotes, embed interactable items called smart chips, use keyboard shortcuts. |
Microsoft Word | $159.99 by itself or starting at $6 per month for Microsoft 365 | Yes | Microsoft Copilot is available in Word for an additional fee. | Coworkers can suggest edits and add comments to Word files sent to them. | Yes | Customize your own editing options and how copy/paste works; change image quality and size settings; customize the display. |
The pricing varies depending on the version, but generally, Microsoft Word is most commonly encountered in workplaces as part of a Microsoft 365 suite business plan. In contrast, Google Docs is free to use with a Google account.
You can access Microsoft Word in various ways:
Google Docs is free with a personal email account. Google Workspace business plans, all of which include Docs, are as follows:
You’ll need to inquire with Google to find pricing for Enterprise plans, which add S/MIME encryption, noise cancellation, in-domain live streaming, data regions, and more.
Both Google Docs and Microsoft Word:
Google Docs offers prebuilt templates such as meeting notes, emails (easily sent via Gmail), or calendar events for Google Calendar integration.
Like Google Docs, the online version of Microsoft Word saves your work to the cloud. With the desktop version of Microsoft Word, you’ll need to manage where to save the file yourself, but the application automatically saves your progress every few seconds. In Docs, you can press @ to link to other files in your Google Workspace account, add images, or add widgets. Both applications offer dictation or voice typing.
Both applications also enable you to add a table of contents. Google Docs builds this table of contents in the sidebar based on headings, while Microsoft Word requires manually creating the table of contents, which can be a tedious task.
In both applications, you can add and adjust headers, footers, margins, and page numbers. To accomplish such tasks in Google Docs, make sure your document is in Pages format, as opposed to Pageless. In Word, simply go to the Insert menu.
To share Google Docs or invite others to collaborate, simply adjust your privacy settings under the Share menu and send your collaborator the URL.
You can share Microsoft Word documents as individual files. Either send the editable files or change them to Reading View so the file is viewable but not editable in the browser version. You can add new comments, and other people can reply to those comments. The browser version supports real-time co-authoring just as Google Docs does.
Customer support for Google Docs on business plans is paywalled, depending on the business plan. Workspace administrators have access to admin support. On any version of Google Docs, you can send feedback to Google. Explore the different tiers of support options here.
Microsoft offers customer support for all its products, available for both business or personal account issues. Microsoft 365 administrators for businesses have an additional option through the Microsoft 365 admin center. Small businesses — those with fewer than 25 Microsoft 365 user licenses — can purchase Business Assist for more personalized support for $5 per user per month. From there, support options for business accounts rise in price.
Google Docs lets you embed tables or images, or code blocks. Word includes several different styles of table. In both, you can insert images either from your computer or from the web — Microsoft uses Bing, while Docs naturally uses Google Images.
Google Docs is entirely online, with the exception of the offline mode option, which still works in a browser window.
In the web version of Microsoft Word, documents can be downloaded as a PDF, .odt, or .ppt, or sent to Kindle. But they cannot be downloaded as .docx files like those created in the full desktop application.
SEE: Moving your work? Here is how to export a Google Doc from your iPhone to another device.Â
Both word processors have optional generative AI assistants at an additional price.
Users who subscribe to Microsoft 365 Copilot (work) or Copilot Pro (home) can use Microsoft Copilot in Word. Copilot can summarize, write, edit, and brainstorm information within the document. Microsoft 365 Copilot costs $30 per user per month, while Copilot Pro costs $20.00 user per month.
Google’s version of AI, Gemini, is accessible in Docs with a Google Workspace subscription, as well as through the Gemini Business or Enterprise add-on, the Gemini Education and Education Premium add-on, or the Google One AI Premium plan. Gemini Business costs $20 per user per month with a one-year commitment; Gemini Enterprise costs $30 per user per month with a one-year commitment; and Google One AI Premium costs $19.99 per month.
Use Google Docs if …
Use Microsoft Word if …
As independent contributors, writers in your business will have personal preferences for word processors. Apple users, for instance, may be accustomed to Pages, a free app that comes with Apple devices and offers a range of convenient features alongside a user-friendly interface. If your team feels more comfortable using offline files, Microsoft Word is the better choice. Of course, Google Docs and Microsoft Word aren’t the only word processors: free applications like LibreOffice may do the trick.
I use Google Docs for work, so I was already familiar with many of its features. I consulted Google documentation to brush up on some of its advanced features. I also viewed demo videos and user reviews. I tested the browser version of Microsoft Word and also reviewed official documentation and user feedback for additional insights.