Google Slides opens in a wide horizontal layout by default. That works for standard talks, but it falls short when you need a poster, a phone-sized graphic, or something printed on regular paper. Switching to a vertical format takes less than a minute once you know where to click.
Why Switch Google Slides to Vertical Orientation
A portrait layout reorganises your design instantly. Text reads top to bottom, images get more room, and the deck feels less crowded.
If your audience views the file on a phone or tablet, a tall canvas matches how they already hold the device. No pinch-zoom, no rotating the screen sideways. Printed handouts also come out cleanly because portrait dimensions match standard paper sizes like Letter and A4.
How to Make Google Slides Vertical: Step-by-Step
The setting lives inside the Page Setup menu. Here is the full process:
- Open your presentation in Google Slides.
- Click File in the top menu bar.
- Select Page Setup from the dropdown.
- In the dialog box, click the dropdown and choose Custom.
- Enter dimensions where the height value is greater than the width. A common starting size is 7.5 inches wide by 10 inches tall.
- Click Apply.
Every slide in the file switches to portrait mode at once. Walk through each one and reposition any text boxes, images, or charts that shifted during the resize. The Arrange menu helps snap objects back into alignment.
Common Vertical Dimensions to Use
The right size depends on where the slides will be viewed or printed. Here are the most-used options:
| Dimensions (W × H) | Best Used For |
|---|---|
| 7.5 × 10 inches | General portrait presentations |
| 8.5 × 11 inches | Letter-size handouts and worksheets |
| 8.5 × 14 inches | Legal documents |
| 9 × 16 inches | Mobile screens and vertical video |
| 1080 × 1920 px | Instagram Stories, TikTok, Pinterest |
For social media graphics, switch the unit dropdown to pixels before typing the values. Many writers also pair their decks with note-taking tools, so checking out apps that simplify student life can be useful when planning content.
When a Vertical Google Slides Layout Works Best
Portrait mode in Google Slides suits specific use cases better than the standard widescreen format:
- Mobile-first decks: Phones display tall content fully without zooming.
- Scrollable presentations: Viewers move through slides naturally, the same way they scroll feeds.
- Printed material: Letter paper is 8.5 × 11 inches, already a portrait shape, so no awkward cropping or wasted margins.
- Step-by-step guides: A top-down reading flow walks the eye through each point.
- Social posts: Story formats on Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest all use 9:16 ratios.
- Infographics and timelines: Vertical space stacks data in a way landscape cannot.
Things to Know Before Changing the Orientation
Google Slides applies one orientation to the whole file. Mixing portrait and landscape pages in the same deck is not possible, so create two separate files if you need both shapes.
Set the orientation before adding any content. Resizing existing slides forces you to redo every text box and image position, and that takes time. If you also plan to add narration, the steps for voice over Google Slides walk through the recording and import process.
When exporting to PDF, double-check the export preview. The output sometimes reverts to a wide layout, which undoes your work. Chromebook users who run into eye strain editing late can also try dark mode for Google Docs while drafting scripts for their slides.
Working With Vertical Slides on a Chromebook
The desktop steps work the same on Chromebook because Google Slides runs in Chrome. Once you set the page size, you can record the screen for tutorials. The built-in screen recorder in Quick Settings handles full-screen, partial, and window captures with optional microphone audio.
For graphic-heavy work like infographics, some users design in Google Drawings first using a custom vertical canvas, then import the result into a portrait slide. This avoids object-resizing headaches inside Slides itself.
If you need to share a still image of a finished portrait slide, the screenshot shortcuts on Chromebook capture the slide window quickly without exporting the whole file.
FAQs
Can I change just one slide to portrait in Google Slides?
No. Page Setup applies the same orientation to every slide in the file. To use both portrait and landscape, you need two separate Google Slides presentations.
What dimensions should I use for vertical Google Slides?
Use 7.5 × 10 inches for general portrait decks, 8.5 × 11 inches for printable Letter-size pages, and 9 × 16 inches or 1080 × 1920 pixels for mobile and social media content.
How do I rotate an entire Google Slide?
You cannot rotate the slide itself. Only objects like text boxes, images, and shapes rotate. To change the slide shape, go to File, Page Setup, Custom, and enter new height and width values.
Will my content shift when I switch to vertical orientation?
Yes. Text boxes, charts, and images may move or appear stretched after resizing. Duplicate the deck before changing the page setup, then reposition each element manually in the new portrait layout.
Can I make Google Slides vertical on a phone?
Yes, on iPhone, Android, and iPad. Open the Google Slides app, tap the menu, select Page Setup, choose Custom dimensions, and enter a height value larger than the width. Tap Apply.
