Common Formatting Errors That Can Delay Dissertation Approval
You did it. Three years of research. Hundreds of pages written. Your committee approved your defense. You passed. You
uploaded your dissertation to the graduate school portal feeling like you’re finally done. Then you get the email. “Your
dissertation has been rejected due to formatting errors. Please correct the following issues and resubmit.” Your margins
are wrong on 12 pages. Your table of contents doesn’t match your actual page numbers. Your chapter headings aren’t
formatted consistently. None of this has anything to do with your research. But it’s preventing you from graduating.
This happens to students constantly. They think the hard part is over after defending. They assume if their committee
approved the content, the graduate school will too. They’re wrong. Graduate schools don’t evaluate your research
quality. They check formatting compliance. And they’re strict about it because dissertations become part of the
permanent institutional record. If your formatting doesn’t meet specifications, they reject it—even if the research is
brilliant. Here’s what makes this particularly frustrating: most formatting errors that cause rejections are completely
preventable. They’re technical mistakes that students make because they didn’t know the requirements or didn’t implement
them correctly. But once your document is rejected, you’re stuck fixing problems under a deadline, often while starting
a new job or preparing to move. The most common formatting errors fall into a few predictable categories. Students mess
up margins and page numbers. They format headings inconsistently. They misalign tables and figures. They mix fonts and
spacing. They submit files with the wrong names or formats. All of this is avoidable if you know what to check before
submission. That’s what this article covers—the specific formatting deal-breakers that delay approvals and how to catch
them before they cause problems. Because here’s the truth: your committee won’t catch these errors. They’re reading for
content, not checking margin measurements. Your advisor probably doesn’t know the graduate school’s technical
requirements. You’re responsible for formatting compliance, and the graduate school will hold you to their standards
regardless of whether anyone taught you what those standards are.
Margins and pagination are the number one cause of dissertation rejections. Students set them up incorrectly, or they work correctly for most of the document but break on certain pages, and the graduate school sends the whole thing back. The margin problem. Most universities require specific margin measurements, typically 1 inch on all sides or 1.5 inches on the left (binding margin) and 1 inch on the others. These requirements exist because dissertations get printed and bound, and text too close to the edges gets cut off or becomes unreadable. Common margin violations:
Your dissertation has multiple levels of headings: chapter titles, major section headings, subsection headings, maybe sub-subsection headings. These need to be formatted consistently throughout your entire document according to your university’s hierarchy specifications. Most students format headings inconsistently because they’re adjusting them manually rather than using styles. Chapter 1’s headings look different from Chapter 3’s headings. Major sections in one chapter are bold 14pt, same level sections in another chapter are italic 12pt. This inconsistency shows up glaringly in the table of contents. Why heading hierarchy matters. Your heading levels create the structure of your dissertation. They’re not just visual—they’re functional. Your table of contents is generated from your heading styles. If your headings are inconsistent, your TOC will be wrong, incomplete, or formatted incorrectly. For example: You use Heading 1 style for chapter titles in Chapters 1-3, then you forget and manually format Chapter 4’s title with bold 14pt text but don’t apply the Heading 1 style. Chapter 4 won’t appear in your table of contents. Or it will appear but won’t be formatted like the other chapter titles. Graduate schools check TOC accuracy. If your TOC doesn’t match your actual document structure, they’ll reject your submission. Common heading inconsistencies:
Tables and figures are where formatting goes to die in dissertations. Students spend hours getting them to look right in Word, then the PDF conversion shifts them, or they print and everything’s misaligned, or the graduate school rejects the submission because tables overflow margins or figures aren’t positioned correctly. The image anchor problem. In Word, every image and table has an anchor point that determines where it appears in the document. Most students don’t understand anchors, so their figures jump around unexpectedly when they edit text. Anchor options include:
Your university requires specific fonts and spacing throughout your dissertation. Most specify Times New Roman 12pt or similar with double-spacing for body text. Simple enough, right? Except students constantly submit dissertations with font and spacing inconsistencies scattered throughout. A paragraph here in Arial 11pt. A section there in Calibri. Some pages with 1.5 spacing instead of double. Graduate schools catch this and reject the submission. How font mixing happens. You’re not intentionally using multiple fonts. It happens through: Copy-pasting text from other documents (PDFs, web pages, Word documents with different formatting). The source formatting comes along unless you paste as plain text. You paste a paragraph from a journal article and now you’ve got Calibri 11pt in the middle of your Times New Roman 12pt dissertation. Importing figures or tables created in other programs. The text inside the figure retains its original font. You create a table in Excel with default font, paste it into Word, and suddenly that table is in a different font from your body text. Editing in different programs. You work on your dissertation in Word on your computer, then make edits in Google Docs, then export back to Word. Fonts and formatting shift in the conversion. Co-authors or advisors making edits with different default settings. Your advisor reviews your draft in their Word with their default font. They add comments or make changes. When you incorporate their edits, you inadvertently introduce their font settings. The spacing consistency problem. Line spacing inconsistencies are harder to spot visually but graduate schools will catch them. You’re supposed to have double-spacing throughout your body text (usually with exceptions for certain elements like block quotes, captions, or footnotes). What happens instead:
Your dissertation refers to tables, figures, sections, and pages throughout the text. “See Table 3” or “as discussed in Chapter 2” or “Figure 5 shows…” If you type these references manually, you create a maintenance nightmare. If you use Word’s cross-reference feature incorrectly or if references break, you get errors in your final submission. The “Error! Reference source not found” problem. This is every student’s nightmare. You submit your dissertation and it’s peppered with “Error! Reference source not found” instead of table numbers or page references. This happens when:
You’ve formatted your dissertation perfectly. Every margin is correct. Every heading is consistent. Your tables are aligned. Your references work. You export to PDF and upload to your university’s submission portal. Rejected. Because your filename has spaces in it or because you didn’t create the right kind of PDF. This is the stupidest reason for rejection, but it happens regularly because universities have specific technical requirements that students don’t know about until after they submit. File naming requirements. Many university portals have strict file naming rules:
You’ve read about all these formatting errors. How do you catch them before submission so you don’t face rejection? Use a final review checklist. Don’t rely on memory. Use an actual checklist of formatting elements to verify before submission. Your university might provide a checklist in their submission guidelines. If not, create one based on their requirements. Example checklist items:
1. Incorrect Margins and Page Numbering
Margins and pagination are the number one cause of dissertation rejections. Students set them up incorrectly, or they work correctly for most of the document but break on certain pages, and the graduate school sends the whole thing back. The margin problem. Most universities require specific margin measurements, typically 1 inch on all sides or 1.5 inches on the left (binding margin) and 1 inch on the others. These requirements exist because dissertations get printed and bound, and text too close to the edges gets cut off or becomes unreadable. Common margin violations:
- Setting 1 inch margins when your university requires 1.5 inches on the left
- Having correct margins on most pages but violations on pages with tables, figures, or landscape orientation
- Margins that shift slightly due to copy-pasting content from other documents
- Headers or footers that extend into the margin area
- Front matter using Arabic numbers instead of Roman numerals
- Page 1 starting somewhere other than the first page of Chapter 1
- Page numbers appearing on pages where they shouldn’t (like the title page)
- Page numbers positioned incorrectly (wrong side, wrong margin)
- Numbers restarting incorrectly after landscape pages or section breaks
- Blank pages that are counted in numbering when they shouldn’t be
2. Inconsistent Heading Styles
Your dissertation has multiple levels of headings: chapter titles, major section headings, subsection headings, maybe sub-subsection headings. These need to be formatted consistently throughout your entire document according to your university’s hierarchy specifications. Most students format headings inconsistently because they’re adjusting them manually rather than using styles. Chapter 1’s headings look different from Chapter 3’s headings. Major sections in one chapter are bold 14pt, same level sections in another chapter are italic 12pt. This inconsistency shows up glaringly in the table of contents. Why heading hierarchy matters. Your heading levels create the structure of your dissertation. They’re not just visual—they’re functional. Your table of contents is generated from your heading styles. If your headings are inconsistent, your TOC will be wrong, incomplete, or formatted incorrectly. For example: You use Heading 1 style for chapter titles in Chapters 1-3, then you forget and manually format Chapter 4’s title with bold 14pt text but don’t apply the Heading 1 style. Chapter 4 won’t appear in your table of contents. Or it will appear but won’t be formatted like the other chapter titles. Graduate schools check TOC accuracy. If your TOC doesn’t match your actual document structure, they’ll reject your submission. Common heading inconsistencies:
- Different fonts for the same heading level (Chapter 1 uses Arial, Chapter 2 uses Times New Roman)
- Different sizes for the same heading level (some Level 2 headings are 12pt, others are 14pt)
- Different formatting for the same level (some bold, some italic, some plain)
- Different spacing before/after headings (some have extra space, others don’t)
- Mixing styles within a chapter (first section uses Heading 2, second section manually formatted to look similar)
- Some chapters or sections missing from TOC because you didn’t apply heading styles
- Inconsistent indentation levels because you mixed up which style level to use
- Different formatting for entries at the same level
- Wrong page numbers because heading placement shifted when you edited
- All headings at the same level are automatically formatted identically
- Your TOC generates correctly from those styles
- If you need to change heading formatting, you change the style definition once and every heading updates
- Every heading is independent and can drift from the others
- Your TOC might not capture manually formatted headings
- If you need to change formatting, you have to hunt down every heading individually
3. Misaligned Tables and Figures
Tables and figures are where formatting goes to die in dissertations. Students spend hours getting them to look right in Word, then the PDF conversion shifts them, or they print and everything’s misaligned, or the graduate school rejects the submission because tables overflow margins or figures aren’t positioned correctly. The image anchor problem. In Word, every image and table has an anchor point that determines where it appears in the document. Most students don’t understand anchors, so their figures jump around unexpectedly when they edit text. Anchor options include:
- In line with text (figure acts like a character)
- Square, tight, or through (text wraps around figure)
- Top and bottom (text above and below, but not beside)
- Behind or in front of text (figure in a layer separate from text)
- Tables too wide for the page margins
- Tables split awkwardly across pages (column headers on one page, data on the next)
- Inconsistent table formatting (some centered, some left-aligned)
- Table captions positioned differently for different tables
- Font sizes within tables that don’t match body text requirements
- Screenshots or graphs pasted at low resolution (grainy, pixelated)
- Text within figures too small to read when printed
- Colors that don’t distinguish clearly when printed in grayscale
- Figures that lose quality during PDF conversion
- Inconsistent caption formatting (some bold, some italic, some plain)
- Inconsistent caption position (some above tables, some below)
- Missing or incorrect numbering (Table 3 followed by Table 5)
- Captions that don’t follow university requirements for punctuation and format
4. Inconsistent Font Sizes or Line Spacing
Your university requires specific fonts and spacing throughout your dissertation. Most specify Times New Roman 12pt or similar with double-spacing for body text. Simple enough, right? Except students constantly submit dissertations with font and spacing inconsistencies scattered throughout. A paragraph here in Arial 11pt. A section there in Calibri. Some pages with 1.5 spacing instead of double. Graduate schools catch this and reject the submission. How font mixing happens. You’re not intentionally using multiple fonts. It happens through: Copy-pasting text from other documents (PDFs, web pages, Word documents with different formatting). The source formatting comes along unless you paste as plain text. You paste a paragraph from a journal article and now you’ve got Calibri 11pt in the middle of your Times New Roman 12pt dissertation. Importing figures or tables created in other programs. The text inside the figure retains its original font. You create a table in Excel with default font, paste it into Word, and suddenly that table is in a different font from your body text. Editing in different programs. You work on your dissertation in Word on your computer, then make edits in Google Docs, then export back to Word. Fonts and formatting shift in the conversion. Co-authors or advisors making edits with different default settings. Your advisor reviews your draft in their Word with their default font. They add comments or make changes. When you incorporate their edits, you inadvertently introduce their font settings. The spacing consistency problem. Line spacing inconsistencies are harder to spot visually but graduate schools will catch them. You’re supposed to have double-spacing throughout your body text (usually with exceptions for certain elements like block quotes, captions, or footnotes). What happens instead:
- Some paragraphs are 1.5 spaced instead of double
- Spacing after paragraphs varies (0pt some places, 6pt others, 12pt elsewhere)
- Spacing before headings is inconsistent
- Text copied from sources brings its own spacing settings
- Keeping double-spacing in block quotes
- Not indenting consistently (some quotes indented 0.5 inches, others 1 inch)
- Using inconsistent fonts in quoted material
- Not using a distinct style for block quotes, just manually formatting each one
- Chapter titles (often 14pt or 16pt)
- Section headings (usually 12pt but sometimes bold or italic)
- Figure captions (often 10pt or 11pt)
- Table text (sometimes smaller than body text for readability)
- Footnotes (usually 10pt)
- Headers and footers (usually 10pt)
5. Missing or Broken Cross-References
Your dissertation refers to tables, figures, sections, and pages throughout the text. “See Table 3” or “as discussed in Chapter 2” or “Figure 5 shows…” If you type these references manually, you create a maintenance nightmare. If you use Word’s cross-reference feature incorrectly or if references break, you get errors in your final submission. The “Error! Reference source not found” problem. This is every student’s nightmare. You submit your dissertation and it’s peppered with “Error! Reference source not found” instead of table numbers or page references. This happens when:
- You created cross-references to figures, tables, or headings, then deleted or moved those elements
- You broke the link between reference and target by changing the target’s formatting
- You copied content with cross-references between documents and the links broke
- You converted your document to PDF and the cross-references didn’t convert properly
- Update them to point to a different target
- Delete the references along with the target
- Don’t delete the target after all
- Every table needs a caption created with Insert → Caption (not just manually typing “Table 1”)
- Every figure needs a caption created the same way
- Major sections should use heading styles (not manually formatted headings)
- When referencing a table, figure, or section: Insert → Cross-reference → select what you’re referencing
- Cross-references to tables, figures, headings, pages
- Table of contents
- List of tables and figures
- Automatic page numbering
- Any other field codes in your document
6. Incorrect File Naming or Submission Format
You’ve formatted your dissertation perfectly. Every margin is correct. Every heading is consistent. Your tables are aligned. Your references work. You export to PDF and upload to your university’s submission portal. Rejected. Because your filename has spaces in it or because you didn’t create the right kind of PDF. This is the stupidest reason for rejection, but it happens regularly because universities have specific technical requirements that students don’t know about until after they submit. File naming requirements. Many university portals have strict file naming rules:
- No spaces (use underscores or hyphens instead)
- No special characters except underscores, hyphens, and periods
- Specific format like LastName_FirstName_Dissertation.pdf
- Maximum filename length (often 50 characters)
- No version numbers or dates in filename
- PDF/A format (archival format that embeds all fonts)
- Specific PDF version (like PDF 1.7)
- No password protection or restrictions
- All fonts embedded
- No compression that degrades image quality
- Bookmarks enabled for navigation
- “PDF/A compliant” checkbox (check it if required)
- “Create bookmarks using: Headings” (this creates navigation bookmarks)
- Font embedding options (ensure all fonts embed)
- File size limits (often 50-100 MB, which large dissertations with figures can exceed)
- Browser compatibility (portal works in Chrome but not Safari, or vice versa)
- Upload timeouts for slow connections
- Required fields that aren’t obviously required until you try to submit
- Required filename format
- Maximum file size
- PDF version and settings requirements
- Metadata requirements
- Any portal-specific instructions
- All pages display correctly
- All fonts appear correctly (no missing or substituted fonts)
- All images are clear and high-resolution
- Bookmarks/navigation works if required
- File size is within limits
- Metadata is correct
Prevention Tips
You’ve read about all these formatting errors. How do you catch them before submission so you don’t face rejection? Use a final review checklist. Don’t rely on memory. Use an actual checklist of formatting elements to verify before submission. Your university might provide a checklist in their submission guidelines. If not, create one based on their requirements. Example checklist items:
- [ ] All margins meet requirements (1 inch or 1.5 inch as specified)
- [ ] No content extends into margin areas
- [ ] Front matter uses lowercase Roman numerals (i, ii, iii…)
- [ ] Body chapters start with page 1 in Arabic numerals
- [ ] Page numbers positioned correctly and consistently
- [ ] All headings use consistent styles at appropriate levels
- [ ] Table of contents matches document structure and page numbers
- [ ] All tables and figures properly captioned and numbered
- [ ] No tables/figures extend beyond margins
- [ ] Consistent font throughout (Times New Roman 12pt or as required)
- [ ] Consistent line spacing (double-spaced body text, appropriate spacing for other elements)
- [ ] All cross-references working (no “Error!” messages)
- [ ] Filename follows required format
- [ ] PDF format meets specifications (PDF/A if required)
- [ ] File size within limits
- [ ] Metadata correct
- First page of each chapter (verify page numbering, heading format)
- Every page with tables or figures (verify alignment and no margin violations)
- Table of contents pages (verify accuracy)
- Random pages throughout (verify consistent formatting)
- Your file uploads successfully
- File size is acceptable
- Portal accepts your filename format
- All required fields are completed
- You can navigate through all submission steps
- Your university’s requirements are complex or unclear
- Your dissertation has complex formatting (many tables/figures, equations, appendices)
- You’ve already been rejected once and need to ensure fixes are correct
- You’re submitting under a tight deadline and can’t afford rejection