15 Proofreading Checks To Avoid Common English Writing Mistakes
Why Proofreading Is the Last Line of Defense Against Writing Errors
Even experienced writers make mistakes. A misplaced comma, a repeated word, or a confused homophone can undermine an otherwise polished piece of writing. Proofreading is not simply re-reading your work — it is a structured, deliberate process of hunting down specific errors before your content reaches an audience. The 15 checks below give you a reliable system to catch the most common English writing mistakes every time.
Grammar and Sentence Structure Checks
1. Subject-Verb Agreement
Every subject must match its verb in number. “The team are winning” is common in British English but jarring in American English. Always confirm whether your subject is singular or plural, especially when phrases separate the subject from the verb.
2. Dangling and Misplaced Modifiers
A dangling modifier describes something that is not clearly stated in the sentence. “Running down the street, the keys fell out of my pocket” implies the keys were running. Identify who or what performs the action and place the modifier directly beside it.
3. Sentence Fragments and Run-Ons
Fragments lack a subject, a verb, or a complete thought. Run-on sentences join independent clauses without proper punctuation or conjunctions. Read each sentence in isolation to confirm it stands on its own.
4. Parallel Structure
When listing items or using correlative conjunctions, keep grammatical forms consistent. “She likes hiking, to swim, and cycling” should read “She likes hiking, swimming, and cycling.” Parallelism creates rhythm and clarity.
Punctuation and Mechanics Checks
5. Comma Usage
Commas are among the most misused punctuation marks. Check for comma splices, where two independent clauses are joined only by a comma. Also verify that introductory phrases are followed by a comma and that items in a series are separated correctly.
6. Apostrophe Errors
Apostrophes indicate possession or contraction, never plurals. “The dog’s leash” shows ownership. “Its” is possessive; “it’s” means “it is.” Scan every apostrophe in your draft and confirm its purpose is correct.
7. Quotation Mark Placement
In American English, commas and periods go inside quotation marks. In British English, they go outside unless part of the quoted material. Know your style guide and apply it consistently throughout the entire document.
8. Hyphen and Em Dash Confusion
Hyphens join compound modifiers before nouns, such as “well-known author.” Em dashes signal a sharp break in thought or add emphasis — like this. En dashes connect ranges of numbers or dates. Using these interchangeably creates mechanical errors that distract careful readers.
Word Choice and Spelling Checks
9. Commonly Confused Homophones
Spell-checkers will not catch “their,” “there,” and “they’re” used incorrectly because all three are real words. Build a personal list of homophones you frequently misuse — affect/effect, accept/except, principal/principle — and search for each one individually.
10. Redundant Phrases
Redundancy weakens writing by repeating meaning unnecessarily. Phrases like “past history,” “free gift,” and “end result” contain built-in repetition. Cut the extra word and let the remaining term carry the full meaning.
11. Inconsistent Spelling and Terminology
If you spell “e-mail” in paragraph one and “email” in paragraph five, your writing feels careless. Decide on one spelling for every term that has variants and use the Find function to confirm consistency across the entire document.
12. Vague Pronoun References
When a pronoun could refer to more than one noun, readers become confused. “James told Marcus that he needed to leave” — who needed to leave? Rewrite ambiguous sentences to name the subject directly rather than relying on pronouns that float without clear antecedents.
Formatting and Consistency Checks
13. Capitalization Errors
Proper nouns, titles used before names, and the first word of every sentence require capitalization. Common nouns do not. Watch for inconsistent capitalization of job titles, product names, and headings throughout your document.
14. Number Formatting
Most style guides recommend spelling out numbers one through nine and using numerals for 10 and above. Never start a sentence with a numeral. Check that percentages, dates, and measurements follow the same formatting rules from beginning to end.
15. Heading and List Consistency
If your first heading uses title case, every heading must use title case. If your first bullet point ends with a period, every bullet must end with a period. Inconsistent formatting signals a lack of attention to detail and disrupts the visual flow of your content.
Building a Proofreading Habit That Sticks
Checking for 15 specific issues may feel overwhelming at first, but the process becomes faster with practice. Work through the list in passes rather than trying to catch everything at once. Read your draft aloud to catch awkward phrasing your eyes might skip over. Print the document if possible — errors that hide on screens often appear clearly on paper.
Consider creating a personal error log. Each time you find a recurring mistake, add it to your checklist. Over time, your writing will improve because you will begin catching errors before they appear on the page.
Proofreading is not about achieving perfection on the first draft. It is about giving your ideas the clean, professional presentation they deserve. Use these 15 checks consistently, and your writing will communicate with far greater authority and clarity.

