Word Count for Press Release: The Exact Length Editors Expect
TL;DR: A standard press release runs 400–600 words. Shorter looks like a tweet with a logo; longer loses the editor before the news hook lands.
Table of contents
- Why press release length matters
- The standard press release word count
- Word count by press release type
- Anatomy of a press release and where words go
- How to check and trim your press release
- Common mistakes to avoid
- FAQ
- Quick checklist
- More tools / Related links
Why press release length matters
Journalists receive dozens — sometimes hundreds — of press releases every day. Editors at wire services run automated filters before a human eye ever lands on your subject line. Word count is not just a stylistic preference; it signals professionalism.
A press release that runs 1,200 words tells an editor one of two things: you do not understand the format, or you do not respect their time. At the other extreme, a 150-word release that skips the background, omits the quote, and forgets the boilerplate signals that the story has no substance.
Getting the length right is the first invisible test your release has to pass. Pass it, and editors read on. Fail it, and the rest of your carefully written content never gets seen.
The standard press release word count
The industry standard for a press release is 400 to 600 words. This range has held consistent across print, digital, and newswire formats for decades, and for good reason — it maps almost exactly to the required structural elements of the format.
Here is how the range breaks down in practice:
- Under 400 words: Too short to include all five required elements — headline, dateline, lead paragraph, body, and boilerplate. Editors will treat it as an announcement snippet, not a publishable story.
- 400–500 words: Tight and punchy. Ideal for product launches, personnel announcements, and event notices where the facts speak for themselves.
- 500–600 words: Gives room for one extended quote, one additional context paragraph, or two supporting data points. This is the sweet spot for research findings, partnership announcements, and funding rounds.
- 600–800 words: Acceptable for genuinely complex stories — regulatory filings, acquisitions, scientific study results — where context cannot be cut without losing meaning. Use this range sparingly.
- Over 800 words: Rarely appropriate for a press release. If your story needs this much space, consider whether a full media backgrounder sent alongside a shorter release would serve you better.
Most major newswire services (PR Newswire, Business Wire, GlobeNewswire) charge by word block and list 400–600 words as the standard distribution tier. Exceeding that adds cost without measurably improving pickup rates.
Word count by press release type
Not every announcement carries the same story weight. Some need more context; others are strongest when kept minimal. Use this table as your starting target before writing:
| Press release type | Recommended word count |
|---|---|
| Personnel / executive hire | 300–450 words |
| Product launch | 400–550 words |
| Event announcement | 350–500 words |
| Partnership or collaboration | 400–550 words |
| Award or recognition | 300–400 words |
| Funding announcement | 500–650 words |
| Research or survey results | 550–700 words |
| Crisis statement or correction | 300–500 words |
| Merger or acquisition | 600–800 words |
These are starting points, not hard caps. Always cut to the minimum words required to tell the story accurately and completely. If a personnel announcement can be told in 320 words, do not pad it to reach 450.
Anatomy of a press release and where words go
Understanding how word count distributes across the standard structure helps you allocate space before you write a single sentence.
Headline — 10 to 15 words One active sentence that states the news and names the entity. No buzzwords, no superlatives. Title case throughout.
Dateline — 5 to 10 words City, state or country, date, and the connector phrase: "— [Company name] today announced..."
Lead paragraph — 60 to 80 words The most important paragraph in the release. Answer who, what, when, where, and why in two or three sentences. If an editor stops reading here, the lead should still give them a complete and publishable story.
First quote — 40 to 60 words A statement from the most senior relevant spokesperson. It must add context, voice, or perspective — not simply restate the lead in quotation marks.
Body paragraphs — 150 to 250 words Facts, figures, methodology, timeline, or supporting background. Keep to two or three paragraphs. Each one should earn its place by answering a question a journalist would reasonably ask.
Second quote — optional, 40 to 60 words A customer, partner, or external voice lends credibility. Skip it if it does not add genuinely new information.
Boilerplate — 60 to 100 words The standard "About [Company]" paragraph. Write it once and reuse it across every release. It should not change.
Contact block — 20 to 30 words Name, title, direct phone number, and email address. Nothing else.
Running the math: headline + dateline + lead + one quote + two body paragraphs + boilerplate + contact equals roughly 430 to 570 words. The standard 400–600 word range emerges naturally from the required elements — which is why it is the standard.
How to check and trim your press release
Once you have a complete draft, do these three things before distribution.
1. Verify the word count accurately
Estimates are unreliable. Paste your release into the Word Counter at JustTextTool to get an exact word and character count in seconds. If you are over 600 words, review the output to identify which section is running long before cutting anything at random. Often, the body paragraphs or a bloated boilerplate are the culprit.
2. Remove hidden spacing and formatting issues
Text copied from Microsoft Word, Google Docs, or a CRM often carries double spaces, non-breaking spaces, and erratic line breaks. These inflate your apparent word count and cause garbled output when the release is uploaded to a newswire platform. Run the draft through the Whitespace Cleaner to normalize all spacing in one step.
3. Confirm your headline is in title case
Press release headlines follow title case — major words capitalized, minor words lowercase. If you drafted in sentence case and need to convert without retyping, use the Case Converter to switch the formatting instantly.
Common mistakes to avoid
Burying the news in the introduction Many releases spend the opening paragraph on company history before stating what actually happened. Editors read lead paragraphs; they skim everything else. Put the news first, always.
Quoting corporate jargon instead of a person "We are excited to announce this transformative, best-in-class solution" is not a quote — it is noise. Quotes should sound like something a real person said in an interview. If you would not say it aloud, do not put it in quotation marks.
Listing product features instead of outcomes A product release that enumerates ten technical specifications gives a journalist nothing to write about. State one clear outcome — faster processing, lower cost, better accuracy — and let the feature list live on the product page.
Omitting the boilerplate A release without an "About [Company]" paragraph is structurally incomplete. Editors and wire service systems both flag missing boilerplate. Always include it, even for internal announcements.
Sending the release as an attachment Most journalists will not open an attachment from an unknown sender. Paste the release body into the email itself. For newswire uploads, use plain text or the platform's own editor rather than uploading a formatted Word file.
Padding with adjectives to hit a perceived minimum If your story is complete at 380 words, do not add filler sentences to reach 400. A tight, complete release at 380 words will outperform a padded release at 500.
FAQ
What is the ideal word count for a press release? 400 to 600 words covers the vast majority of press release types. Complex stories such as mergers, acquisitions, or detailed research findings can run up to 800 words when the additional length is genuinely necessary.
Should a press release be one page or two? One page. A 500-word release fits comfortably on one standard page at 12-point type with one-inch margins. If your draft spills onto a second page, cut until it fits — do not shrink the font or narrow the margins.
Does word count affect SEO on online press releases? Indirectly. Online releases distributed through newswires are indexed by search engines. A release with a specific, newsworthy headline, one or two factual phrases, and a working URL will index better than a keyword-stuffed release. Length should be driven by story clarity, not SEO targets.
Can a press release be under 300 words? Only for the narrowest single-fact announcements, such as a correction, a brief award notice, or an office closure. Any story that requires a quote, supporting context, and a boilerplate will struggle to meet professional standards at under 300 words.
Do journalists actually read the full press release? Rarely. Most journalists scan the headline, read the lead, check the quote for a usable line, and look for one concrete number or fact. Each section of your release should work as a standalone unit, because that is often how it gets read.
Quick checklist
- Word count sits between 400 and 600 (up to 800 for complex stories only)
- Headline is 10–15 words and formatted in title case
- Lead paragraph answers who, what, when, where, and why in under 80 words
- At least one attributed quote from a named spokesperson is included
- Body paragraphs are limited to two or three, each with a clear purpose
- Boilerplate "About [Company]" paragraph is present and complete
- Contact name, direct phone number, and email address are listed
- No double spaces or stray line breaks (use Whitespace Cleaner before sending)
- Word count verified with a counting tool, not estimated
More tools / Related links
- Word Counter — verify your press release length before distribution
- Whitespace Cleaner — remove double spaces and stray line breaks from copied text
- Case Converter — switch between title case, sentence case, and other formats
- Uppercase Converter — convert acronyms and header text to all caps
- Lowercase Converter — normalize text pasted from all-caps sources