Use a baseline grid

Last updated on Jun 2, 2026

Learn how to align text to a baseline grid for consistent spacing across columns and pages in Adobe InDesign.

A baseline grid aligns text baselines across columns and pages for consistent spacing and readability. Use it to maintain alignment across frames and spreads. It follows the document’s leading and can be set at the document or frame level.

The grid appears as horizontal lines and is visible only when the zoom level exceeds the set view threshold.

Set up the baseline grid

Select Edit > Preferences > Grids (Windows) or InDesign > Preferences > Grids (macOS).

Select a color from the Color menu in the Baseline Grid section or select Custom.

In Start, enter the offset distance from either the top of the page or the top margin.

Tip

For the easiest alignment with the vertical ruler, use zero.

In Relative To, select whether the grid starts from the top of the page or the top margin.

In Increment Every, enter a value matching your body text leading.

For example, for text with 12-point leading, enter 12 pt.

In View Threshold, set the minimum zoom level at which the grid appears.

Tip

Use higher values to reduce clutter at lower zoom levels.

Select OK.

Create a frame-based baseline grid

Frame-based baseline grids override the document grid within a frame, allowing different leading for specific text areas. When Grids in Back is active (Preferences > Grids), frame grids appear in front of the document grid.

Use the Selection tool to select a text frame.

Select Object > Text Frame Options.

Select the Baseline Options tab.

Select Use Custom Baseline Grid.

Set the Start and Increment Every value for the frame-specific grid.

Select OK.