Most people never venture beyond Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V in Google Docs. But the real time-savers are the shortcuts nobody talks about—especially for navigating long docs or fixing formatting fast.

Once you use them, you’ll wonder how you ever managed without.

Google Docs Add comment dialog

1Paste Without Formatting Makes Everything Cleaner

This is my favorite shortcut—and for good reason. You copy text from a website, paste it into your document, and suddenly you’re dealing with weird fonts, random colors, and formatting that doesn’t match. Instead of spending some more time cleaning it up, just useCtrl + Shift + V(Windows) orCmd + Shift + V(Mac) to paste the content without formatting.

With this shortcut you canstrip away all the original formatting and paste plain textthat matches your document’s style. It’s perfect when you’re pulling quotes from research papers, copying code snippets, or grabbing text from emails.

Gogole Docs voice typing active

2Add Comments Without Breaking Your Flow

Adding comments to documents usually means highlighting text, right-clicking, and navigating through menus. TheCtrl + Alt + M(Windows) orCmd + Option + M(Mac) shortcut lets you add comments instantly without breaking your typing flow.

This shortcut is most useful during editing sessions. You can mark sections that need fact-checking, suggest rewrites, or leave reminders without interrupting your reading flow. It’s also brilliant for collaborative projects where you need to give feedback quickly.

Google docs shortcut in action-anim

To use this shortcut more effectively, combine it with other Google Docs shortcuts. For instance, you can pair it withCtrl + Shift + Right/Left Arrowkey to select text with your keyboard, add a comment, type your note, and hitEnter.

3Voice Typing Beats Typing Every Time

Google Docs voice typing turns your speech into textwith impressive accuracy. When your fingers are tired, but your brain is still churning out ideas,Ctrl + Shift + S(works on both Windows and Mac) instantly activates voice typing. Google’s voice recognition is highly impressive, and it understands punctuation commands, too.

You can say,periodto add a period,new lineto start a new paragraph, orcommato add a comma. It handles technical terms surprisingly well, though you might need to clean up a word or two. Voice typing is perfect for first drafts, brainstorming sessions, or when you’re dealing with repetitive strain injury.

Google Docs all shortcut

To get the best results with voice typing, try to speak naturally and clearly, but don’t slow down too much. The AI often performs better with normal speech patterns than with overly careful pronunciation.

4Quickly Select Whole Paragraphs

When working with longer documents, you often need to adjust entire sections at once. A common problem with click-and-drag selection is that you can frequently miss the first word or grab unwanted text from adjacent paragraphs. For precise selection, useCtrl + Shift + Up/Down Arrow(Windows) orCmd + Shift + Up/Down Arrow(Mac) to select complete paragraphs instantly.

This shortcut makes restructuring documents and applying consistent formatting effortless, even when you’re moving sections around or formatting multiple paragraphs with the same style.

Productivity

5Move Paragraphs Up and Down Instantly

Often, when you need to reorganize paragraphs for better flow, you’ll simply cut and paste the text blocks, which risks breaking formatting.Alt + Shift + Up/Down Arrow(Windows) orOption + Shift + Up/Down Arrow(Mac) moves your current paragraph up or down without touching your clipboard.

Put your cursor anywhere in a paragraph and use this shortcut to slide it into the perfect position. It’s incredible for outlining, reordering lists, or fixing the flow of your arguments.

This works beautifully with bullet points and numbered lists, too. you’re able to rearrange entire sections without worrying about breaking your formatting or losing your numbering.

6Jump to Start or End Without Scrolling

Scrolling through a long document isn’t fun when you have to jump back and forth from start to finish. On Windows, pressCtrl + Hometo go to the beginning andCtrl + Endto reach the end. On a Mac,Cmd + Up Arrowtakes you to the top, andCmd + Down Arrowmoves you to the bottom instantly.

This shortcut is handy when you’re working with lengthy reports, manuscripts, or research papers. I often need to check the introduction after writing the conclusion and vice versa, so this makes it easy to jump to the start and back.

7Bonus: Show All Shortcuts When You Forget

I use these shortcuts daily to speed up my Google Docs workflow and rely less on the mouse. But there are dozens more worth learning, though it’s hard to remember them all. Fortunately, you can bring up the list of supported Google Docs shortcuts usingCtrl + /(Windows) orCmd + /(Mac).

The list is searchable too. In the Keyboard shortcuts search bar, typeformatto find formatting shortcuts,insertfor insertion options, orbrowse categories to discover shortcuts you didn’t know existed.

These seven shortcuts help you work faster without reaching for the mouse all the time. Start with the ones you need most. Once you get used to them,try these 90+ Google Docs keyboard shortcutsto save even more time and effort every day.