This paper presents the global/local approach in the multi-scale modeling of woven material impact behavior. This approach optimally considers important microscopic mechanisms to accurately predict outcomes and reduce computational time. The inspiration for this approach stems from the specific behavior exhibited by woven materials under ballistic impact:(1) Zone 1 (Local) is a small square around the impact position, requiring comprehensive microscopic modeling to describe complex physical phenomena accurately.(2) Zone 2 (Global) represents the remaining fabric outside of Zone 1, exhibiting more global behavior and modeled with a mesoscopic model.Building upon a previous work's joining technique, an interface between these two zones is implemented and validated through numerical tensile testing. The proposed approach is then compared to the complete mesoscopic model already validated in the case of a 2D Kevlar KM2 woven fabric submitted to ballistic impact. The global/local approach demonstrates slightly greater flexibility due to the presence of microscopic yarns. It successfully predicts all microscopic phenomena while significantly reducing the degrees of freedom compared to full microscopic modeling along the entire yarn length.