Word to Pages
Blog

How Many Pages Is 400 Words?

400 words is approximately 0.8 pages single-spaced or 1.6 pages double-spaced when using 12pt Times New Roman with 1-inch margins on letter-size paper.

Page Count by Font and Spacing for 400 Words

FontSingle1.151.5Double
Arial0.911.31.8
Times New Roman0.80.91.21.6
Calibri0.911.31.7
Courier New1.11.31.72.3
Verdana1.11.21.62.1
Georgia0.911.31.7
Helvetica0.911.31.8
Garamond0.80.91.21.5
Palatino0.911.31.7
Tahoma11.11.41.9
Trebuchet MS0.91.11.41.9
Century Gothic1.11.31.62.2
Book Antiqua0.911.31.7
Comic Sans MS1.11.21.62.1

*Based on 12pt font, letter-size paper, 1-inch margins

Calculate Your Exact Page Count

pt

Preview — Times New Roman, 12pt, double spacing

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs. How vexingly quick daft zebras jump.

Estimated Pages

1.600

2 pages when printed

Words Per Page

250

for this formatting

Reading Time

1 min 42 sec

at 238 wpm

Paragraphs

4

~100 words each

Sentences

27

~15 words each

Page Count Breakdown for 400 Words

How a word count translates to pages depends on more than just the number of words. Using the academic standard of 12pt Times New Roman with 1-inch margins, 400 words fills roughly 0.8 pages single-spaced and 1.6 pages double-spaced. Switching to Arial or Calibri shifts these numbers slightly because of differences in character width. Larger fonts—14pt or 16pt—stretch the page count higher, while tighter margins or smaller fonts (10pt or 11pt) compress it. The figures above represent the most common reference point in academic and editorial settings.

What 400 Words Looks Like in Practice

This particular word count appears in surprisingly specific places. A document of this length typically functions as a flash-fiction story, a personal statement opening, or a short blog comment or review. Each context has its own conventions: a blog post at this length tends to include a hook, two or three subsections, and a takeaway; an academic piece prioritizes argument structure and citation density; a creative piece focuses on scene and dialogue. Matching the length to the form is just as important as hitting the word count.

Time Estimates for 400 Words

Reading, speaking, and writing time all scale predictably with word count. At a typical reading pace of 250 words per minute, 400 words takes about 2 minutes to read silently. Read aloud at conversational pace (≈130 wpm), the same passage runs about 3 minutes. First-draft writing speed varies widely, but a reasonable budget including light research and revision is around 12 minutes of focused work. These estimates assume continuous attention; in practice, expect interruptions to add 25–50%.

Frequently Asked Questions