Check Grammar In Google Docs | Catch Errors Before Sharing

Google Docs flags spelling and grammar issues as you type, and a full-document check lets you review every suggestion in one clean panel.

Google Docs can feel forgiving: you type, a red or blue underline pops up, and you tap to fix it. Still, lots of people hit the same snag—some errors never get flagged, the wrong language is active, or the suggestions feel random.

This page walks you through a repeatable way to run a grammar pass in Google Docs, tune the settings that control what gets checked, and handle the common glitches that stop suggestions from showing up.

What Google Docs Grammar Tools Actually Do

Google Docs uses two layers of writing help. One runs in the background while you type. The other runs as a full scan that steps through each flagged spot, one by one.

Suggestions while you type

When writing suggestions are on, Docs underlines spelling issues in red and grammar suggestions in a different color. Click an underline and you’ll see a short menu with a replacement, plus an option to ignore it.

This mode is great for typos and small fixes, but it can miss errors when the document language is set wrong, when your browser blocks scripts, or when your text is inside a table cell or header that you forgot to review.

Full-document review

The full checker runs a sweep across your document and shows each suggestion in a side panel. You can accept a change, skip it, or move to the next item. It’s the closest thing Docs has to a “proofread view,” and it’s the mode to use before you share a link or hand in an assignment.

What it misses

Docs is solid at spelling, agreement errors, repeated words, and common mix-ups. It’s less reliable with style choices, long sentences, and wording that needs human judgment. Treat suggestions as a second set of eyes, not as a final verdict.

Check Grammar In Google Docs On Desktop

If you’re on a laptop or desktop, the built-in checker is fastest because you can review every suggestion from one corner of the screen.

Run a full sweep from the Tools menu

  1. Open your document.
  2. Go to ToolsSpelling and grammarSpelling and grammar check.
  3. A panel opens on the right. Use Change to accept a suggestion or Ignore to skip it.

The updated review flow and where to find it in the menu are described in Google’s product notes on Google Workspace update on spelling and grammar checking.

Use quick actions for faster edits

  • Tab accepts the current suggestion and jumps forward.
  • Right-click an underline to pick a replacement without opening the full panel.
  • Ignore is useful for names, course codes, or terms your class uses.

If you’re editing a long paper, start with the full panel, then do a second skim by scrolling and right-clicking any underlines that remain. That two-pass rhythm keeps you from losing your place.

Add class terms to your personal dictionary

Docs can learn your vocabulary. If a correct word is getting flagged, add it to your personal dictionary so it stops popping up as an error.

  1. Go to ToolsSpelling and grammarPersonal dictionary.
  2. Type the word, then save it.
  3. Or right-click an underlined word and choose the add-to-dictionary option.

This is handy for surnames, place names, scientific terms, or a brand name you cite across multiple docs.

Checking Grammar In Google Docs On Mobile And Tablet

On phones and tablets, Docs still offers a spelling check. Grammar suggestions can be more limited, yet you can still catch a lot of mistakes before sending a file.

Android

  1. Open the Google Docs app and open your file.
  2. Tap the pencil icon to enter edit mode.
  3. Tap the three-dot menu, then tap Spell check.
  4. Use Change or Ignore for each suggestion.

iPhone and iPad

The steps look similar: enter edit mode, open the menu, and run spell check. If you don’t see it, update the Docs app and confirm your device language matches the language you’re writing in.

When you need a deeper grammar pass, open the same doc on a computer and run the full checker before you submit it.

Settings That Change What Gets Flagged

Many “Docs isn’t checking my grammar” complaints come down to one setting: language. If Docs thinks your English essay is in another language, it won’t flag the right patterns.

Set the document language

In the Docs menu, open File and pick Language, then select the language that matches your text. After that, rerun the full checker. If you’re writing in a mix of languages, keep the main body set to your primary one and be ready to ignore a few flags in quoted passages.

Turn suggestions on

Under ToolsSpelling and grammar, you can toggle spelling suggestions and grammar suggestions. If the toggles are off, you can still run a one-time check, yet you won’t see underlines as you type.

Match your Google Account language when needed

If your Docs menus and suggestions keep defaulting to the wrong language, your Google Account language can be the culprit. Google lets you set a preferred web language at Google Account language settings. After a change, refresh Docs and check your document language again.

Fast fixes when grammar suggestions don’t show up
What you see Likely reason What to try
No underlines at all Suggestions toggled off Tools → Spelling and grammar → turn spelling and grammar suggestions on
Spelling works, grammar doesn’t Document language mismatch File → Language → pick the language you’re writing in, then rerun the checker
Checker panel opens, shows nothing No detectable issues in the scan range Scroll to skipped areas like headers, tables, or footnotes and review them
Suggestions look wrong for your dialect Variant mismatch (US vs UK, etc.) Switch the document language to the dialect you want, then scan again
Underlines vanish after a browser update Extension conflict or blocked scripts Try an incognito window, disable extensions one at a time, then reload
Names and terms get flagged nonstop Personal dictionary lacks your terms Add recurring terms to Personal dictionary, or ignore them once per doc
Mobile spell check is missing App version is old Update the Google Docs app, reopen the document, then check again
Grammar checks stop midway Large doc or slow device Wait a moment, then run the checker again, or split the doc into sections

Common Grammar Fixes Docs Flags And How To Decide Fast

When you run the checker, you’ll see a pattern in what Docs tends to flag. Knowing the patterns helps you decide in seconds, without second-guessing every prompt.

Subject and verb agreement

These suggestions are usually safe. Read the sentence out loud. If the verb doesn’t match the subject, accept the fix.

Wrong word pairs

Docs often catches mix-ups like “their” and “there.” Scan the sentence for meaning. If the suggestion swaps a word and the sentence still says what you mean, take it.

Repeated words

Repeated words can slip in while rearranging a sentence. If you see “the the” or a doubled phrase, delete one. If the repetition is intentional for tone in a quote, ignore it.

Comma and punctuation prompts

Some punctuation prompts are style choices. If a suggestion adds a comma, check the pause point. If the sentence reads cleaner with the comma, accept it. If it makes the sentence choppy, ignore it and keep your own style.

Writing Habits That Help Docs Catch More Mistakes

You can get better results from the checker by feeding it cleaner chunks of text. Small habits make the scan more useful and cut down on noise.

Write in short blocks, then run a check

Try writing a few paragraphs, then run the checker before you keep going. That keeps your head in the topic and stops you from stacking errors across pages.

Use headings and spacing to reduce run-ons

When a paragraph stretches for half a page, run-on sentences hide inside it. Add a heading, split the paragraph, and re-read each sentence. The checker catches more once the structure is cleaner.

Read one paragraph in reverse order

This trick pulls your brain out of “autopilot.” Start at the end of a paragraph and read sentence by sentence upward. Typos and missing words stand out.

Watch copied text

Text pasted from PDFs or websites can carry weird spacing, non-breaking spaces, or stray line breaks. If suggestions look odd, paste the text into plain text first, then paste into Docs, or use Paste without formatting.

When The Built-In Checker Isn’t Enough

For school work, job applications, and public writing, the built-in checker is a strong baseline. If you want deeper style feedback, you can add a third-party checker through a browser extension or a Google Workspace add-on.

Before you install anything, read the permissions screen. Extensions can read what you type. If you’re writing private material, stick with the built-in tool or ask your school about approved add-ons.

Which Google Docs tool to use for each editing task
Task Docs feature Extra step
Catch typos while drafting Spelling suggestions underlines Right-click to accept, ignore, or add to dictionary
Proofread before sharing Spelling and grammar check panel Use Tab to accept and keep moving
Stop flagging a class term Personal dictionary Add the term once, then rerun the scan
Switch proofing language File → Language Pick the right dialect, then recheck the doc
Clean pasted formatting Paste without formatting Reapply headings, then run the checker
Review only one section Select text, then run the checker Scan the selection, then move to the next section
Final human pass Read mode or Print preview Skim for flow, spacing, and missing words

A Fast Final Pass Before You Share Or Submit

Once the checker says you’re done, take two minutes for a quick human sweep. It’s the part that catches the little slips a tool can’t judge.

  • Scan your title, headings, and first paragraph. Small errors there leave the strongest impression.
  • Search your doc for double spaces and fix them.
  • Check names, dates, and numbers against your source notes.
  • Read the last paragraph out loud to catch missing words.
  • Switch to Print preview for a different view that makes spacing issues stand out.

If you share the doc with others, run the checker again after you accept suggestions. A new edit can create a new agreement error two lines later.

References & Sources