Change screen modes

Last updated on Jun 2, 2026

Use screen modes to preview layouts, present work, or focus on editing without interface distractions in Adobe InDesign.

InDesign provides several screen modes that change only how your document appears on screen, without affecting the actual file or its output. These modes support different working needs—whether you’re editing with full interface visibility, checking bleed or slug areas, or presenting a clean, distraction-free view. To enable this feature, select View > Screen Mode, and choose one of the available options—Normal, Preview, Bleed, Slug, or Presentation Shift + W.

Mode

Description

Normal Mode

Displays your document in a standard window with all grids, guides, and non-printing objects visible, along with a white pasteboard and full access to workspace panels—ideal for everyday editing and layout work.

Preview Mode

Shows your design as it would appear when output, hiding all non-printing elements such as grids, guides, frame edges, and non-printing objects, and switching the pasteboard to the preview background color defined in Preferences so you can evaluate the layout without distractions.

Bleed Mode

Provides the same clean view as Preview Mode but also displays any content within the bleed area defined in Document Setup, helping you confirm that images and backgrounds extend correctly beyond the page edge for printing.

Slug Mode

Extends the view beyond the bleed to include the slug area—also defined in Document Setup—showing production notes, color information, or printer marks while suppressing non-printing workspace elements.

Presentation Mode

Offers a full-screen, slideshow-style view with all menus, panels, and tools hidden; navigate through spreads using clicks or keyboard shortcuts and enter this mode using Shift + W or by selecting it from the Screen Mode menu, making it useful for client presentations or screen-sharing reviews. Press Esc to return to your previous screen mode. You can also use the arrow keys to navigate between spreads during presentations.