Proofreading vs Editing
Proofreading and editing are related, but they are not the same. Understanding the difference helps you brief editors properly and compare quotes fairly.
Key takeaways
- Proofreading is usually a final check for errors and consistency.
- Editing is broader and can improve how the writing communicates.
- The right choice depends on how finished the document is and what you want changed.
Proofreading vs Editing
Proofreading and editing are related, but they are not the same. Understanding the difference helps you brief editors properly and compare quotes fairly.
Proofreading usually comes near the end of the writing process. Editing can happen earlier and may involve improving clarity, flow, tone, structure or expression.
What proofreading usually includes
A proofreader checks a near-final document for mistakes and inconsistencies. The focus is usually spelling, grammar, punctuation, typos, repeated words, formatting consistency and English variant.
- best for finished or nearly finished documents
- usually lighter than editing
- often used before submission or publication
What editing usually includes
Editing can improve the writing itself. Depending on the brief, this may include clarity, flow, tone, structure, sentence rhythm and consistency.
- useful when the writing still feels rough
- may involve more judgement and rewriting suggestions
- often comes before proofreading
How to decide
Ask whether the document is ready apart from small errors. If yes, proofreading may be enough. If the argument, flow, expression or reader impact still needs work, editing is likely to help more.
- choose proofreading for final polish
- choose editing for clarity and development
- use both for important documents when possible
Editors Portal tip
When in doubt, describe the document rather than trying to choose the perfect service label. A good enquiry explains the word count, deadline, document type, subject area and what you want improved.
Related editor categories
Proofreaders
For final checks and polish.
RelatedCopyeditors
For clarity, consistency and style.
RelatedAcademic Proofreaders & Editors
For student and research writing.
Yes. A clear brief lets editors recommend the appropriate level of support.
Not necessarily. Price should be considered alongside experience, document type, deadline and service level.
Yes. Important documents benefit from enough time for editing, review and final checks.
Need help with a document?
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