Formatting excel cell with formula

Conditional formatting can help make patterns and trends in your data more apparent. To use it, you create rules that determine the format of cells based on their values, such as the following monthly temperature data with cell colors tied to cell values. 

Conditional formatting example

You can apply conditional formatting to a range of cells (either a selection or a named range), an Excel table, and in Excel for Windows, even a PivotTable report.

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Conditional formatting typically works the same way in a range of cells, an Excel table, or a PivotTable report. However, conditional formatting in a PivotTable report has some extra considerations:

  • There are some conditional formats that don’t work with fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report. For example, you can’t format such fields based on whether they contain unique or duplicate values. These restrictions are mentioned in the remaining sections of this article, where applicable.

  • If you change the layout of the PivotTable report by filtering, hiding levels, collapsing and expanding levels, or moving a field, the conditional format is maintained as long as the fields in the underlying data are not removed.

  • The scope of the conditional format for fields in the Values area can be based on the data hierarchy and is determined by all the visible children (the next lower level in a hierarchy) of a parent (the next higher level in a hierarchy) on rows for one or more columns, or columns for one or more rows.

    Note: In the data hierarchy, children do not inherit conditional formatting from the parent, and the parent does not inherit conditional formatting from the children.

  • There are three methods for scoping the conditional format of fields in the Values area: by selection, by corresponding field, and by value field.

The default method of scoping fields in the Values area is by selection. You can change the scoping method to the corresponding field or value field by using the Apply formatting rule to option button, the New Formatting Rule dialog box, or the Edit Formatting Rule dialog box.

Method

Use this method if you want to select

Scoping by selection

  • A contiguous set of fields in the Values area, such as all of the product totals for one region.

  • A non-contiguous set of fields in the Values area, such as product totals for different regions across levels in the data hierarchy.

Scoping by value field

  • Avoid making many non-contiguous selections.

  • Conditionally format a set of fields in the Values area for all levels in the hierarchy of data.

  • Include subtotals and grand totals.

Scoping by corresponding field

  • Avoid making many non-contiguous selections.

  • Conditionally format a set of fields in the Values area for one level in the hierarchy of data.

  • Exclude subtotals.

When you conditionally format fields in the Values area for top, bottom, above average, or below average values, the rule is based on all visible values by default. However, when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:

  • A column and its parent row field.

  • A row and its parent column field.

Note: Quick Analysis is not available in Excel 2010 and previous versions.

Use the Quick Analysis button Quick Analysis button to apply selected conditional formatting to the selected data. The Quick Analysis button appears automatically when you select data.

  1. Select the data that you want to conditionally format. The Quick Analysis button appears on the lower-right corner of the selection.

    Selected data with the Quick Analysis button

  2. Click the Quick Analysis button Quick Analysis button, or press Ctrl+Q.

  3. In the pop-up that appears, on the Formatting tab, move your mouse over the different options to see a Live Preview on your data, and then click on the formatting option you want.

    Formatting tab in the Quick Analysis gallery

    Notes: 

    • The formatting options that appear in the Formatting tab depend on the data you have selected. If your selection contains only text, then the available options are Text, Duplicate, Unique, Equal To, and Clear. When the selection contains only numbers, or both text and numbers, then the options are Data Bars, Colors, Icon Sets, Greater, Top 10%, and Clear.

    • Live preview will only render for those formatting options that can be used on your data. For example, if your selected cells don’t contain matching data and you select Duplicate, the live preview will not work.

  4. If the Text that Contains dialog box appears, enter the formatting option you want to apply and click OK.

If you’d like to watch a video that shows how to use Quick Analysis to apply conditional formatting, see Video: Use conditional formatting.

You can download a sample workbook that contains different examples of applying conditional formatting, both with standard rules such as top and bottom, duplicates, Data Bars, Icon Sets and Color Scales, as well as manually creating rules of your own.

Download: Conditional formatting examples in Excel

Color scales are visual guides that help you understand data distribution and variation. A two-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of two colors. The shade of the color represents higher or lower values. For example, in a green and yellow color scale, as shown below, you can specify that higher value cells have a more green color and lower value cells have a more yellow color.

Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their color — just use the context menu.

Formatting all cells with a two-color scale

Tip: If any cells in the selection contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value other than an error value.

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Color Scales.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select a two-color scale.

    Hover over the color scale icons to see which icon is a two-color scale. The top color represents higher values, and the bottom color represents lower values.

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Formatting Options button that appears next to a PivotTable field that has conditional formatting applied.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a completely new conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection: Click Selected cells.

    • All cells for a Value label: Click All cells showing <Value label> values.

    • All cells for a Value label, excluding subtotals and the grand total: Click All cells showing <Value label> values for <Row Label>.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values (default).

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select 2-Color Scale.

  7. To select a type in the Type box for Minimum and Maximum, do one of the following:

    • Format lowest and highest values:    Select Lowest Value and Highest Value.

      In this case, you do not enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.

    • Format a number, date, or time value:    Select Number and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.

    • Format a percentage Percent:    Enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.

      Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Don’t enter a percent sign.

      Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally because the distribution of values is proportional.

    • Format a percentile:    Select Percentile and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue. Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.

      Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20thpercentile) in one color grade proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another color grade proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.

    • Format a formula result:    Select Formula and then enter values for Minimum and Maximum.

      • The formula must return a number, date, or time value.

      • Start the formula with an equal sign (=).

      • Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.

      • It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

        Notes: 

        • Make sure that the Minimum value is less than the Maximum value.

        • You can choose a different type for the Minimum and Maximum. For example, you can choose a number for Minimum a percentage for Maximum.

  8. To choose a Minimum and Maximum color scale, click Color for each, and then select a color.

    If you want to choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors. The color scale you select is shown in the Preview box.

Color scales are visual guides that help you understand data distribution and variation. A three-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of three colors. The shade of the color represents higher, middle, or lower values. For example, in a green, yellow, and red color scale, you can specify that higher value cells have a green color, middle value cells have a yellow color, and lower value cells have a red color.

Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their color — just use the context menu.

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Color Scales.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select a three-color scale. The top color represents higher values, the center color represents middle values, and the bottom color represents lower values.

    Hover over the color scale icons to see which icon is a three-color scale.

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Formatting Options button that appears next to a PivotTable field that has conditional formatting applied..

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a new conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select 3-Color Scale.

  7. Select a type for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. Do one of the following:

    • Format lowest and highest values:    Select a Midpoint.

      In this case, you do not enter a Lowest and HighestValue.

    • Format a number, date, or time value:    Select Number and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.

    • Format a percentage:    Select Percent and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.

      Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.

    • Format a percentile:    Select Percentile and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.

      Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.

      Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) in one color grade proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another color grade proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.

    • Format a formula result:    Select Formula and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.

      The formula must return a number, date, or time value. Start the formula with an equal sign (=). Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied. It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

      Notes: 

      • You can set minimum, midpoint, and maximum values for the range of cells. Make sure that the value in Minimum is less than the value in Midpoint, which in turn is less than the value in Maximum.

      • You can choose a different type for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. For example, you can choose a Minimum number, Midpoint percentile, and Maximum percent.

      • In many cases, the default Midpoint value of 50 percent works best, but you can adjust this to fit unique requirements.

  8. To choose a Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum color scale, click Color for each, and then select a color.

    • To choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors.

    • The color scale you select is shown in the Preview box.

A data bar helps you see the value of a cell relative to other cells. The length of the data bar represents the value in the cell. A longer bar represents a higher value, and a shorter bar represents a lower value. Data bars are useful in spotting higher and lower numbers, especially with large amounts of data, such as top selling and bottom selling toys in a holiday sales report.

The example shown here uses data bars to highlight dramatic positive and negative values. You can format data bars so that the data bar starts in the middle of the cell, and stretches to the left for negative values.

Data bars that highlight positive and negative values

Tip: If any cells in the range contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value (such as 0 or «N/A») instead of an error value.

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, click Data Bars, and then select a data bar icon.

    Conditional Formatting

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select Data Bar.

  7. Select a Minimum and MaximumType. Do one of the following:

    • Format lowest and highest values:    Select Lowest Value and Highest Value.

      In this case, you do not enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.

    • Format a number, date, or time value:    Select Number and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.

    • Format a percentage:    Select Percent and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.

      Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.

      Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.

    • Format a percentile    Select Percentile and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.

      Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.

      Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) in one data bar proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another data bar proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.

    • Format a formula result     Select Formula, and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.

      • The formula has to return a number, date, or time value.

      • Start the formula with an equal sign (=).

      • Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.

      • It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

    Notes: 

    • Make sure that the Minimum value is less than the Maximum value.

    • You can choose a different type for Minimum and Maximum. For example, you can choose a Minimum number and a Maximum percent.

  8. To choose a Minimum and Maximum color scale, click Bar Color.

    If you want to choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors. The bar color you select is shown in the Preview box.

  9. To show only the data bar and not the value in the cell, select Show Bar Only.

  10. To apply a solid border to data bars, select Solid Border in the Border list box and choose a color for the border.

  11. To choose between a solid bar and a gradiated bar, choose Solid Fill or Gradient Fill in the Fill list box.

  12. To format negative bars, click Negative Value and Axis and then, in the Negative Value and Axis Settings dialog box, choose options for the negative bar fill and border colors. You can choose position settings and a color for the axis. When you are finished selecting options, click OK.

  13. You can change the direction of bars by choosing a setting in the Bar Direction list box. This is set to Context by default, but you can choose between a left-to-right and a right-to-left direction, depending on how you want to present your data.

Use an icon set to annotate and classify data into three to five categories separated by a threshold value. Each icon represents a range of values. For example, in the 3 Arrows icon set, the green up arrow represents higher values, the yellow sideways arrow represents middle values, and the red down arrow represents lower values.

Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their icon — just use the context menu.

The example shown here works with several examples of conditional formatting icon sets.

Different icon sets for the same data

You can choose to show icons only for cells that meet a condition; for example, displaying a warning icon for those cells that fall below a critical value and no icons for those that exceed it. To do this, you hide icons by selecting No Cell Icon from the icon drop-down list next to the icon when you are setting conditions. You can also create your own combination of icon sets; for example, a green «symbol» check mark, a yellow «traffic light», and a red «flag.»

Tip: If any cells in the selection contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value (such as 0 or «N/A») instead of an error value.

Quick formatting

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, click Icon Set, and then select an icon set.

    Conditional Formatting

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select Icon Set.

    1. Select an icon set. The default is 3 Traffic Lights (Unrimmed). The number of icons and the default comparison operators and threshold values for each icon can vary for each icon set.

    2. You can adjust the comparison operators and threshold values. The default range of values for each icon are equal in size, but you can adjust these to fit your unique requirements. Make sure that the thresholds are in a logical sequence of highest to lowest from top to bottom.

    3. Do one of the following:

      • Format a number, date, or time value:    Select Number.

      • Format a percentage:    Select Percent.

        Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.

        Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.

      • Format a percentile:    Select Percentile. Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.

        Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) using a particular icon and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) using another icon, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.

      • Format a formula result:    Select Formula, and then enter a formula in each Value box.

        • The formula must return a number, date, or time value.

        • Start the formula with an equal sign (=).

        • Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.

        • It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

    4. To make the first icon represent lower values and the last icon represent higher values, select Reverse Icon Order.

    5. To show only the icon and not the value in the cell, select Show Icon Only.

      Notes: 

      • You may need to adjust the column width to accommodate the icon.

      • The size of the icon shown depends on the font size that is used in that cell. As the size of the font is increased, the size of the icon increases proportionally.

To more easily find specific cells, you can format them by using a comparison operator. For example, in an inventory worksheet sorted by categories, you could highlight products with fewer than 10 items on hand in yellow. Or, in a retail store summary worksheet, you might identify all stores with profits greater than 10%, sales volumes less than $100,000, and region equal to «SouthEast.»

The examples shown here work with examples of built-in conditional formatting criteria, such as Greater Than, and Top %. This formats cities with a population greater than 2,000,000 with a green background and average high temperatures in the top 30% with orange.

Formatting shows cities with more than 2 million, and top 30% of high temperatures

Note: You cannot conditionally format fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by text or by date, only by number.

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Highlight Cells Rules.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select the command you want, such as Between, Equal To Text that Contains, or A Date Occurring.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.

If you’d like to watch videos of these techniques, see Video: Conditionally format text and Video: Conditionally format dates.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet or on other worksheets, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only cells that contain.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format only cells with list box, do one of the following:

    • Format by number, date, or time:    Select Cell Value, select a comparison operator, and then enter a number, date, or time.

      For example, select Between and then enter 100 and 200, or select Equal to and then enter 1/1/2009.

      You can also enter a formula that returns a number, date, or time value.

      • If you enter a formula, start it with an equal sign (=).

      • Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.

      • It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

    • Format by text:    Select Specific Text, choosing a comparison operator, and then enter text.

      For example, select Contains and then enter Silver, or select Starting with and then enter Tri.

      Quotes are included in the search string, and you may use wildcard characters. The maximum length of a string is 255 characters.

      You can also enter a formula that returns text.

      • If you enter a formula, start it with an equal sign (=).

      • Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.

      • It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.

      To see a video of this technique, see Video: Conditionally format text.

    • Format by date:    Select Dates Occurring and then select a date comparison.

      For example, select Yesterday or Next week.

      To see a video of this technique, see Video: Conditionally format dates.

    • Format cells with blanks or no blanks:    Select Blanks or No Blanks.

      A blank value is a cell that contains no data and is different from a cell that contains one or more spaces (spaces are considered as text).

    • Format cells with error or no error values:    Select Errors or No Errors.

      Error values include: #####, #VALUE!, #DIV/0!, #NAME?, #N/A, #REF!, #NUM!, and #NULL!.

  7. To specify a format, click Format. The Format Cells dialog box appears.

  8. Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.

    You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.

You can find the highest and lowest values in a range of cells that are based on a cutoff value you specify. For example, you can find the top 5 selling products in a regional report, the bottom 15% products in a customer survey, or the top 25 salaries in a department .

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Top/Bottom Rules.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select the command you want, such as Top 10 items or Bottom 10 %.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only top or bottom ranked values.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values that rank in the list box, select Top or Bottom.

  7. Do one of the following:

    • To specify a top or bottom number, enter a number and then clear the % of the selected range box. Valid values are 1 to 1000.

    • To specify a top or bottom percentage, enter a number and then select the % of the selected range box. Valid values are 1 to 100.

  8. Optionally, change how the format is applied for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report that are scoped by corresponding field.

    By default, the conditional format is based on all visible values. However when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:

    • A column and its parent row field, by selecting each Column group.

    • A row and its parent column field, by selecting each Row group.

  9. To specify a format, click Format. The Format Cells dialog box appears.

  10. Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.

    You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.

You can find values above or below an average or standard deviation in a range of cells. For example, you can find the above average performers in an annual performance review or you can locate manufactured materials that fall below two standard deviations in a quality rating.

Quick formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Top/Bottom Rules.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select the command you want, such as Above Average or Below Average.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.

You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:

    • Selection:    Click Just these cells.

    • Corresponding field:    Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.

    • Value field:    Click All <value field> cells.

  5. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only values that are above or below average.

  6. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values that are list box, do one of the following:

    • To format cells that are above or below the average for all of the cells in the range, select Above or Below.

    • To format cells that are above or below one, two, or three standard deviations for all of the cells in the range, select a standard deviation.

  7. Optionally, change how the format is applied for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report that are scoped by corresponding field.

    By default, the conditionally format is based on all visible values. However when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:

    • A column and its parent row field, by selecting each Column group.

    • A row and its parent column field, by selecting each Row group.

  8. Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.

  9. Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.

    You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are displayed in the Preview box.

Note: You can’t conditionally format fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by unique or duplicate values.

In the example shown here, conditional formatting is used on the Instructor column to find instructors that are teaching more than one class (duplicate instructor names are highlighted in a pale red color). Grade values that are found just once in the Grade column (unique values) are highlighted in a green color.

Values in column C that aren't unique are colored rose, unique values in column D are green

Quick formatting

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Highlight Cells Rules.

    Conditional Formatting

  3. Select Duplicate Values.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.

Advanced formatting

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  3. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet or table is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  4. Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only unique or duplicate values.

  5. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format all list box, select unique or duplicate.

  6. Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.

  7. Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.

    You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.

If none of the above options is what you’re looking for, you can create your own conditional formatting rule in a few simple steps. 

Notes: If there’s already a rule defined that you just want to work a bit differently, duplicate the rule and edit it.

  1. Select Home > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules, then in the Conditional Formatting Rule Manager dialog, select a listed rule and then select Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule then appears in the list.

  2. Select the duplicate rule, then select Edit Rule.

  1. Select the cells that you want to format.

  2. On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > New Rule.

    New formatting rule

  3. Create your rule and specify its format options, then click OK.

    If you don’t see the options that you want, you can use a formula to determine which cells to format — see the next section for steps).

If you don’t see the exact options you need when you create your own conditional formatting rule, you can use a logical formula to specify the formatting criteria. For example, you may want to compare values in a selection to a result returned by a function or evaluate data in cells outside the selected range, which can be in another worksheet in the same workbook. Your formula must return True or False (1 or 0), but you can use conditional logic to string together a set of corresponding conditional formats, such as different colors for each of a small set of text values (for example, product category names).

Note: You can enter cell references in a formula by selecting cells directly on a worksheet or other worksheets. Selecting cells on the worksheet inserts absolute cell references. If you want Excel to adjust the references for each cell in the selected range, use relative cell references. For more information, see Create or change a cell reference and Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.

Tip: If any cells contain a formula that returns an error, conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To address this, use IS functions or an IFERROR function in your formula to return a value that you specify (such as 0, or «N/A») instead of an error value.

  1. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.

    Conditional Formatting

    The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

  2. Do one of the following:

    • To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

    • To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears. 

    • To change a conditional format, do the following:

      1. Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.

      2. Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet or other worksheets, and then by clicking Expand Dialog.

      3. Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.

  3. Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report, do the following:

    • To scope by selection:    Click Selected cells.

    • To scope by corresponding field:    Click All cells showing <Values field> values.

    • To scope by Value field:    Click All cells showing <Values field> for <Row>.

  4. Under Select a Rule Type, click Use a formula to determine which cells to format.

    1. Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values where this formula is true list box, enter a formula.

      You have to start the formula with an equal sign (=), and the formula must return a logical value of TRUE (1) or FALSE (0).

    2. Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.

    3. Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.

      You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.

      Example 1: Use two conditional formats with criteria that uses AND and OR tests    

      The following example shows the use of two conditional formatting rules. If the first rule doesn’t apply, the second rule applies.

      First rule: a home buyer has budgeted up to $75,000 as a down payment and $1,500 per month as a mortgage payment. If both the down payment and the monthly payments fit these requirements, cells B4 and B5 are formatted green.

      Second rule: if either the down payment or the monthly payment doesn’t meet the buyer’s budget, B4 and B5 are formatted red. Change some values, such as the APR, the loan term, the down payment, and the purchase amount to see what happens with the conditionally formatted cells.

      Formula for first rule (applies green color)

      =AND(IF($B$4<=75000,1),IF(ABS($B$5)<=1500,1))

      Formula for second rule (applies red color)

      =OR(IF($B$4>=75000,1),IF(ABS($B$5)>=1500,1))

      Cells B4 and B5 meet their conditions, so they're formatted green

      Example 2: Shade every other row by using the MOD and ROW functions    

      A conditional format applied to every cell in this worksheet shades every other row in the range of cells with a blue cell color. You can select all cells in a worksheet by clicking the square above row 1 and to the left of column A. The MOD function returns a remainder after a number (the first argument) is divided by divisor (the second argument). The ROW function returns the current row number. When you divide the current row number by 2, you always get either a 0 remainder for an even number or a 1 remainder for an odd number. Because 0 is FALSE and 1 is TRUE, every odd numbered row is formatted. The rule uses this formula: =MOD(ROW(),2)=1.

      Every other row is shaded blue

      Note: You can enter cell references in a formula by selecting cells directly on a worksheet or other worksheets. Selecting cells on the worksheet inserts absolute cell references. If you want Excel to adjust the references for each cell in the selected range, use relative cell references. For more information, see Create or change a cell reference and Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.

The following video shows you the basics of using formulas with conditional formatting.

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If you want to apply an existing formatting style to new or other data on your worksheet, you can use Format Painter to copy the conditional formatting to that data.

  1. Click the cell that has the conditional formatting that you want to copy.

  2. Click Home > Format Painter.

    Copy and Paste buttons on the Home tab

    The pointer changes to a paintbrush.

    Tip: You can double-click Format Painter if you want to keep using the paintbrush to paste the conditional formatting in other cells.

  3. To paste the conditional formatting, drag the paintbrush across the cells or ranges of cells you want to format.

  4. To stop using the paintbrush, press Esc.

Note: If you’ve used a formula in the rule that applies the conditional formatting, you might have to adjust any cell references in the formula after pasting the conditional format. For more information, see Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.

If your worksheet contains conditional formatting, you can quickly locate the cells so that you can copy, change, or delete the conditional formats. Use the Go To Special command to find only cells with a specific conditional format, or to find all cells that have conditional formats.

Find all cells that have a conditional format

  1. Click any cell that does not have a conditional format.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Conditional Formatting.

    Editing group on the Home tab

Find only cells that have the same conditional format

  1. Click any cell that has the conditional format that you want to find.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Go To Special.

  3. Click Conditional formats.

  4. Click Same under Data validation.

    Editing group on the Home tab

When you use conditional formatting, you set up rules that Excel uses to determine when to apply the conditional formatting. To manage these rules, you should understand the order in which these rules are evaluated, what happens when two or more rules conflict, how copying and pasting can affect rule evaluation, how to change the order in which rules are evaluated, and when to stop rule evaluation.

  • Learn about conditional formatting rule precedence

    You create, edit, delete, and view all conditional formatting rules in the workbook by using the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box. (On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.)

    Conditional Formatting menu with Manage Rules highlighted

    The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

    When two or more conditional formatting rules apply, these rules are evaluated in order of precedence (top to bottom) by how they are listed in this dialog box.

    Here’s an example that has expiration dates for ID badges. We want to mark badges that expire within 60 days but are not yet expired with a yellow background color, and expired badges with a red background color.

    Conditionally formatted data

    In this example, cells with employee ID numbers who have certification dates due to expire within 60 days are formatted in yellow, and ID numbers of employees with an expired certification are formatted in red. The rules are shown in the following image.

    Conditional formatting rules

    The first rule (which, if True, sets cell background color to red) tests a date value in column B against the current date (obtained by using the TODAY function in a formula). Assign the formula to the first data value in column B, which is B2. The formula for this rule is =B2<TODAY(). This formula tests the cells in column B (cells B2:B15). If the formula for any cell in column B evaluates to True, its corresponding cell in column A (for example, A5 corresponds to B5, A11 corresponds to B11), is then formatted with a red background color. After all the cells specified under Applies to are evaluated with this first rule, the second rule is tested. This formula checks if values in the B column are less than 60 days from the current date (for example, suppose today’s date is 8/11/2010). The cell in B4, 10/4/2010, is less than 60 days from today, so it evaluates as True, and is formatted with a yellow background color. The formula for this rule is =B2<TODAY()+60. Any cell that was first formatted red by the highest rule in the list is left alone.

    A rule higher in the list has greater precedence than a rule lower in the list. By default, new rules are always added to the top of the list and therefore have a higher precedence, so you’ll want to keep an eye on their order. You can change the order of precedence by using the Move Up and Move Down arrows in the dialog box.

    Move Up and Move Down arrows

  • What happens when more than one conditional formatting rule evaluates to True

    Sometimes you have more than one conditional formatting rule that evaluates to True. Here’s how rules are applied, first when rules don’t conflict, and then when they do conflict:

    When rules don’t conflict     For example, if one rule formats a cell with a bold font and another rule formats the same cell with a red color, the cell is formatted with both a bold font and a red color. Because there is no conflict between the two formats, both rules are applied.

    When rules conflict     For example, one rule sets a cell font color to red and another rule sets a cell font color to green. Because the two rules are in conflict, only one can apply. The rule that is applied is the one that is higher in precedence (higher in the list in the dialog box).

  • How pasting, filling, and the Format Painter affect conditional formatting rules

    While editing your worksheet, you may copy and paste cell values that have conditional formats, fill a range of cells with conditional formats, or use the Format Painter. These operations can affect conditional formatting rule precedence in the following way: a new conditional formatting rule based on the source cells is created for the destination cells.

    If you copy and paste cell values that have conditional formats to a worksheet opened in another instance of Excel (another Excel.exe process running at the same time on the computer), no conditional formatting rule is created in the other instance and the format is not copied to that instance.

  • What happens when a conditional format and a manual format conflict

    If a conditional formatting rule evaluates as True, it takes precedence over any existing manual format for the same selection. This means that if they conflict, the conditional formatting applies and the manual format does not. If you delete the conditional formatting rule, the manual formatting for the range of cells remains.

    Manual formatting is not listed in the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box nor is it used to determine precedence.

  • Controlling when rule evaluation stops by using the Stop If True check box

    For backwards compatibility with versions of Excel earlier than Excel 2007, you can select the Stop If True check box in the Manage Rules dialog box to simulate how conditional formatting might appear in those earlier versions of Excel that do not support more than three conditional formatting rules or multiple rules applied to the same range.

    For example, if you have more than three conditional formatting rules for a range of cells, and are working with a version of Excel earlier than Excel 2007, that version of Excel:

    • Evaluates only the first three rules.

    • Applies the first rule in precedence that is True.

    • Ignores rules lower in precedence if they are True.

    The following table summarizes each possible condition for the first three rules:

    If rule

    Is

    And if rule

    Is

    And if rule

    Is

    Then

    One

    True

    Two

    True or False

    Three

    True or False

    Rule one is applied and rules two and three are ignored.

    One

    False

    Two

    True

    Three

    True or False

    Rule two is applied and rule three is ignored.

    One

    False

    Two

    False

    Three

    True

    Rule three is applied.

    One

    False

    Two

    False

    Three

    False

    No rules are applied.

    You can select or clear the Stop If True check box to change the default behavior:

    • To evaluate only the first rule, select the Stop If True check box for the first rule.

    • To evaluate only the first and second rules, select the Stop If True check box for the second rule.

    You can’t select or clear the Stop If True check box if the rule formats by using a data bar, color scale, or icon set.

If you’d like to watch a video showing how to manage conditional formatting rules, see Video: Manage conditional formatting.

The order in which conditional formatting rules are evaluated — their precedence — also reflects their relative importance: the higher a rule is on the list of conditional formatting rules, the more important it is. This means that in cases where two conditional formatting rules conflict with each other, the rule that is higher on the list is applied and the rule that is lower on the list is not applied.

  1. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.

    Conditional Formatting menu with Manage Rules highlighted

    The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.

    The conditional formatting rules for the current selection are displayed, including the rule type, the format, the range of cells the rule applies to, and the Stop If True setting.

    If you don’t see the rule that you want, in the Show formatting rules for list box, make sure that the right range of cells, worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected.

  2. Select a rule. Only one rule can be selected at a time.

  3. To move the selected rule up in precedence, click Move Up. To move the selected rule down in precedence, click Move Down.

    Move Up and Move Down arrows

  4. Optionally, to stop rule evaluation at a specific rule, select the Stop If True check box.

Clear conditional formatting on a worksheet    

  • On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.

Follow these steps if you have conditional formatting in a worksheet, and you need to remove it.

For an entire
worksheet

  • On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.

In a range of cells

  1. Select the cells that contain the conditional formatting.

  2. Click the Quick Analysis Lens button image button that appears to the bottom right of the selected data.

    Notes: 
    Quick Analysis Lens will not be visible if:

    • All of the cells in the selected range are empty, or

    • There is an entry only in the upper-left cell of the selected range, with all of the other cells in the range being empty.

  3. Click Clear Format.

    Clear option

Find and remove the same conditional formats throughout a worksheet

  1. Click on a cell that has the conditional format that you want to remove throughout the worksheet.

  2. On the Home tab, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Go To Special.

  3. Click Conditional formats.

  4. Click Same under Data validation. to select all of the cells that contain the same conditional formatting rules.

  5. On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Selected Cells.

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Tip: The following sections use examples so you can follow along in Excel for the web. To start, download the Conditional Formatting Examples workbook and save it to OneDrive. Then, open OneDrive in a web browser and select the downloaded file.

  1. Select the cells you want to format, then select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > New Rule. You can also open the Conditional Formatting pane and create a new rule without first selecting a range of cells.

    New Rule step 1

  2. Verify or adjust the cells in Apply to range.

  3. Choose a Rule Type and adjust the options to meet your needs. 

  4. When finished, select Done and the rule will be applied to your range.

  1. Select a cell which has a conditional format you want to change. Or you can select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules to open the Conditional Formatting task pane and select an existing rule.

  2. The Conditional Formatting task pane displays any rules which apply to specific cells or ranges of cells.

    Image showing step 2 of editing a Conditional Formatting rule

  3. Hover over the rule and select Edit by clicking the pencil icon. This opens the task pane for rule editing. 

  4. Modify the rule settings and click Done to apply the changes.

The Conditional Formatting task pane provides everything you need for creating, editing, and deleting rules. Use Manage Rules to open the task pane and work with all the Conditional Formatting rules in a selection or a sheet.

  1. In an open workbook, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules.

  2. The Conditional Formatting task pane opens and displays the rules, scoped to your current selection. 

Manage Rules in the task pane

From here, you can: 

  • Choose a different scope on the Manage Rules in menu — for example, choosing this sheet tells Excel to look for all rules on the current sheet.

  • Add a rule by selecting New Rule (the plus sign).

  • Delete all rules in scope by selecting Delete All Rules (the garbage can).

You can use a formula to determine how Excel evaluates and formats a cell.  Open the Conditional Formatting pane and select an existing rule or create a new rule.

In the Rule Type dropdown, select Formula.

Select Formula Rule

Enter the formula in the box. You can use any formula that returns a logical value of TRUE (1) or FALSE (0), but you can use AND and OR to combine a set of logical checks.

For example, =AND(B3=»Grain»,D3<500) is true for a cell in row 3 if both B3=»Grain» and D3<500 are true.

Formula rule type

You can clear conditional formatting in selected cells or the entire worksheet.

  • To clear conditional formatting in selected cells, select the cells in the worksheet. Then Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Selected Cells.

  • To clear conditional formatting in the entire worksheet, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.

  • To delete conditional formatting rules, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting >Manage Rules and use the delete (garbage can) on a specific rule or the Delete all rules button.

Color scales are visual guides which help you understand data distribution and variation. Excel offers both two-color scales and three-color scales. 

A two-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of two colors. The shade of the color represents higher or lower values. For example, in a green and yellow color scale, you can specify that higher value cells be more green and lower value cells have a more yellow.

Two color scale formatting

A three-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of three colors. The shade of the color represents higher, middle, or lower values. For example, in a green, yellow, and red color scale, you can specify that higher value cells have a green color, middle value cells have a yellow color, and lower value cells have a red color.

Three color scale formatting

Tip: You can sort cells that have one of these formats by their color — just use the context menu.

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format using color scales.

  2. Click Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Color Scales and select a color scale.

A data bar helps you see the value of a cell relative to other cells. The length of the data bar represents the value in the cell. A longer bar represents a higher value, and a shorter bar represents a lower value. Data bars are useful in spotting higher and lower numbers, especially with large amounts of data, such as top selling and bottom selling toys in a holiday sales report.

Data bars

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Data Bars and select a style. 

Use an icon set to annotate and classify data into three to five categories separated by a threshold value. Each icon represents a range of values. For example, in the 3 Arrows icon set, the green up arrow represents higher values, the yellow sideways arrow represents middle values, and the red down arrow represents lower values.

Icon set

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Icon Sets and choose an icon set.

This option lets you highlight specific cell values within a range of cells based on their specific contents. This can be especially useful when working with data sorted using a different range.

For example, in an inventory worksheet sorted by categories, you could highlight the names of products where you have fewer than 10 items in stock so it’s easy to see which products need restocking without resorting the data. 

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cell Rules.

  3. Select the comparison, such as Between, Equal To, Text That Contains, or A Date Occurring.

You can highlight the highest and lowest values in a range of cells which are based on a specified cutoff value.

Some examples of this would include highlighting the top five selling products in a regional report, the bottom 15% products in a customer survey, or the top 25 salaries in a department.

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Top/Bottom Rules.

  3. Select the command you want, such as Top 10 items or Bottom 10 %.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).

You can highlight values above or below an average or standard deviation in a range of cells.

For example, you can find the above-average performers in an annual performance review, or locate manufactured materials that fall below two standard deviations in a quality rating.

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home> Styles > Conditional Formatting > Top/Bottom Rules.

  3. Select the option you want, such as Above Average or Below Average.

  4. Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).

  1. Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.

  2. Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cell Rules > Duplicate Values.

  3. Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).

If you want to apply an existing formatting style to other cells on your worksheet, use Format Painter to copy the conditional formatting to that data.

  1. Click the cell that has the conditional formatting you want to copy.

  2. Click Home > Format Painter.

    Copy and Paste buttons on the Home tab

    The pointer will change to a paintbrush.

    Tip: You can double-click Format Painter if you want to keep using the paintbrush to paste the conditional formatting in other cells.

  3. Drag the paintbrush across the cells or range of cells you want formatted.

  4. To stop using the paintbrush, press Esc.

Note: If you’ve used a formula in the rule that applies the conditional formatting, you might have to adjust relative and absolute references in the formula after pasting the conditional format. For more information, see Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.

Note: You can’t use conditional formatting on external references to another workbook.

Need more help?

You can always ask an expert in the Excel Tech Community or get support in the Answers community.

See Also

Conditional formatting compatibility issues

Conditional formatting is a fantastic way to quickly visualize data in a spreadsheet. With conditional formatting, you can do things like highlight dates in the next 30 days, flag data entry problems, highlight rows that contain top customers, show duplicates, and more.

Excel ships with a large number of «presets» that make it easy to create new rules without formulas. However, you can also create rules with your own custom formulas. By using your own formula, you take over the condition that triggers a rule and can apply exactly the logic you need. Formulas give you maximum power and flexibility.

For example, using the «Equal to» preset, it’s easy to highlight cells equal to «apple».

But what if you want to highlight cells equal to «apple» or «kiwi» or «lime»? Sure, you can create a rule for each value, but that’s a lot of trouble. Instead, you can simply use one rule based on a formula with the OR function:

A rule to highlight x, y, or z

Here’s the result of the rule applied to the range B4:F8 in this spreadsheet:

Conditional formatting with the OR function

Here’s the exact formula used:

=OR(B4="apple",B4="kiwi",B4="lime")

Quick start

You can create a formula-based conditional formatting rule in four easy steps:

1. Select the cells you want to format.

Select the cells to format

2. Create a conditional formatting rule, and select the Formula option

Select the formula option

3. Enter a formula that returns TRUE or FALSE.

Enter the formula relative to the active cell

4. Set formatting options and save the rule.

Set formatting options

The ISODD function only returns TRUE for odd numbers, triggering the rule:

The ISODD function returns TRUE for odd numbers, triggering the rule

Video: How to apply conditional formatting with a formula

Formula logic

Formulas that apply conditional formatting must return TRUE or FALSE, or numeric equivalents. Here are some examples:

=ISODD(A1)
=ISNUMBER(A1)
=A1>100
=AND(A1>100,B1<50)
=OR(F1="MN",F1="WI")

The above formulas all return TRUE or FALSE, so they work perfectly as a trigger for conditional formatting.

When conditional formatting is applied to a range of cells, enter cell references with respect to the first row and column in the selection (i.e. the upper-left cell). The trick to understanding how conditional formatting formulas work is to visualize the same formula being applied to each cell in the selection, with cell references updated as usual. Imagine that you entered the formula in the upper-left cell of the selection, and then copied the formula across the entire selection. If you struggle with this, see the section on Dummy Formulas below.

Formula Examples

Below are examples of custom formulas you can use to apply conditional formatting. Some of these examples can be created using Excel’s built-in presets for highlighting cells, but custom formulas can go far beyond presets, as you can see below.

Highlight orders from Texas

To highlight rows that represent orders from Texas (abbreviated TX), use a formula that locks the reference to column F:

=$F5="TX"

Use a formula to highlight rows where state = "TX"

For more details, see this article: Highlight rows with conditional formatting.

Video: How to highlight rows with conditional formatting

Highlight dates in the next 30 days 

To highlight dates occurring in the next 30 days, we need a formula that (1) makes sure dates are in the future and (2) makes sure dates are 30 days or less from today. One way to do this is to use the AND function together with the NOW function like this:

=AND(B4>NOW(),B4<=(NOW()+30))

With a current date of August 18, 2016, the conditional formatting highlights dates as follows:

Conditional formatting to highlight dates in the next 30 days

The NOW function returns the current date and time. For details about how this formula, works, see this article: Highlight dates in the next N days.

Highlight column differences 

Given two columns that contain similar information, you can use conditional formatting to spot subtle differences. The formula used to trigger the formatting below is:

=$B4<>$C4

Conditional formatting to compare columns

See also: a version of this formula that uses the EXACT function to do a case-sensitive comparison.

Highlight missing values

To highlight values in one list that are missing from another, you can use a formula based on the COUNTIF function:

=COUNTIF(list,B5)=0

Highlight missing values with conditional formatting

This formula simply checks each value in List A against values in the named range «list» (D5:D10). When the count is zero, the formula returns TRUE and triggers the rule, which highlights values in List A that are missing from List B.

Video: How to find missing values with COUNTIF

Highlight properties with 3+ bedrooms under $350k

To find properties in this list that have at least 3 bedrooms but are less than $300,000, you can use a formula based on the AND function:

=AND($C5<350000,$D5>=3)

The dollar signs ($) lock the reference to columns C and D, and the AND function is used to make sure both conditions are TRUE. In rows where the AND function returns TRUE, the conditional formatting is applied:

Conditional formatting to highlight property listings

Highlight top values (dynamic example)

Although Excel has presets for «top values», this example shows how to do the same thing with a formula, and how formulas can be more flexible. By using a formula, we can make the worksheet interactive — when the value in F2 is updated, the rule instantly responds and highlights new values.

Dynamic conditional formatting for top values

The formula used for this rule is:

=B4>=LARGE(data,input)

Where «data» is the named range  B4:G11, and «input» is the named range F2.  This page has details and a full explanation.

Gantt charts

Believe it or not, you can even use formulas to create simple Gantt charts with conditional formatting like this:

Using conditional formatting to create a Gantt chart

This worksheet uses two rules, one for the bars, and one for the weekend shading:

=AND(D$4>=$B5,D$4<=$C5) // bars
=WEEKDAY(D$4,2)>5 // weekends

This article explains the formula for bars, and this article explains the formula for weekend shading.

Simple search box

One cool trick you can do with conditional formatting is to build a simple search box. In this example, a rule highlights cells in column B that contain text typed in cell F2:

Conditional formatting search box

The formula used is:

=ISNUMBER(SEARCH($F$2,B2))

For more details and a full explanation, see:

  • Article: How to highlight cells that contain specific text
  • Article: How to highlight rows that contain specific text
  • Video: How to build a search box to highlight data

Troubleshooting

If you can’t get your conditional formatting rules to fire correctly, there’s most likely a problem with your formula. First, make sure you started the formula with an equals sign (=). If you forget this step, Excel will silently convert your entire formula to text, rendering it useless. To fix, just remove the double quotes Excel added at either side and make sure the formula begins with equals (=).

If your formula is entered correctly but is not triggering the rule, you may have to dig a little deeper. Normally, you can use the F9 key to check results in a formula or use the Evaluate feature to step through a formula. Unfortunately, you can’t use these tools with conditional formatting formulas, but you can use a technique called «dummy formulas».

Dummy Formulas

Dummy formulas are a way to test your conditional formatting formulas directly on the worksheet, so you can see what they’re actually doing. This can be a big time-saver when you’re struggling to get cell references working correctly.

In a nutshell, you enter the same formula across a range of cells that matches the shape of your data. This lets you see the values returned by each formula, and it’s a great way to visualize and understand how formula-based conditional formatting works. For a detailed explanation, see this article.

Use dummy formulas to check conditional formatting formulas

Video: Test conditional formatting with dummy formulas

Limitations

There are some limitations that come with formula-based conditional formatting:

  1. You can’t apply icons, color scales, or data bars with a custom formula. You are limited to standard cell formatting, including number formats, font, fill color and border options.
  2. You can’t use certain formula constructs like unions, intersections, or array constants for conditional formatting criteria.
  3. You can’t reference other workbooks in a conditional formatting formula.

You can sometimes work around #2 and #3. You may be able to move the logic of the formula into a cell in the worksheet, then refer to that cell in the formula instead. If you are trying to use an array constant, try created a named range instead.

More CF formula resources

  • More than 30 conditional formatting formulas examples
  • Video training with practice worksheets

In this article we will learn how to format the cells which is containing the formulas in Microsoft Excel.

To format the cells which contain formulas, we use the Conditional Formatting feature along with the ISFORMULA function in Microsoft Excel.

Conditional Formatting: Conditional Formatting is used to highlight the important points with color in a report based on certain conditions.

ISFORMULA-This function is used to check whether a cell reference contains a formula and it returns a True or False.

image 5

 
For Example — We have this Excel data as shown below —

img1

 
We need to check whether cell E3 containsa formula or not.

To check, follow the below given steps:-

  • Select the cell F3 and write the formula.
  • =ISFORMULA(E3), press Enter on the keyboard.
  • The function will return true.
  • It means cell E3 contains a formula.

Let’s take an example to understand how we can highlight the cells which contain formulas.

We have data in range C2:G7, in which column C contains Agents name, column D contains No. of sales, column E contains sales amount and column F contains Average sales amount. We need to highlight the cells which contain the formula.

Follow the below given steps:-

  • Select the data range C3:F7.
  • Go to the Home Tab.
  • Select Conditional Formatting from the Styles group.
  • From the Conditional formatting drop down menu, select New Rule.

img2
 

  • The New Formatting Rule dialog box will appear.
  • Click on “Use a formula to determine which cells to format” from Select a Rule type.
  • Write the formula in Formula tab.
  • =ISFORMULA(C3:F7)

img3
 

  • Click on Format button.
  • The Format Cells dialog box will appear.
  • In the Fill tab, choose the color as per the requirement.
  • Click on OK on the New Formatting Rule dialog box.

img4
 

  • Click on OK on the Format Cells dialog box.

img5

 
All cells which contain formulas will get highlighted with the chosen color. This is the way we can highlight the cells containing formulas in an Excel sheet by using the Conditional Formatting option along with the ISFORMULA function.

image 48

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The best part of conditional formatting is you can use formulas in it. And, it has a very simple sense to work with formulas.

Your formula should be a logical formula and the result should be TRUE or FALSE. If the formula returns TRUE, you’ll get the formatting, and if FALSE then nothing. The point is, by using formulas you can make the best out of conditional formatting.

Yes, that’s right. In the below example, we have used a formula in CF to check whether the value in the cell is smaller than 1000 or not.

use formulas in conditional formatting to check if value is greater

And if that value is smaller than 1000 it will apply the formatting which we have specified, otherwise not. So today in this post, I’d like to share with you simple steps to apply conditional formatting using a formula. And some of the useful examples that you can use in your daily work.

Steps to Apply Conditional Formatting with Formulas

The steps to apply CF with formulas are quite simple:

  1. Select the range to apply Conditional Formatting.
  2. Add a formula to text a condition.
  3. Specify a format to apply when the condition is met.
how to apply conditional formatting using a formula

To learn this in a proper way make sure to download this sample file from here and follow the below-detailed steps.

  • First of all, select the range where you want to apply conditional formatting.
to apply conditional formatting using formulas select range
  • After that, go to Home Tab ➜ Styles ➜ Conditional Formatting ➜ New Rule ➜ Use a formula to determine which cell to format.
to apply conditional formatting using formulas click on new rule
  • Now, in the “Format values where formula is true” enter the below formula.

=E5<1000

to apply conditional formatting using formulas enter formula
  • The next thing is to specify the format to apply and for this, click on the format button and select the format.
to apply conditional formatting using formulas specify formatting
  • In the end, click OK.

While entering a formula in the CF dialog box you can’t see its result or whether that formula is valid or not. So, the best practice is to check that formula before using it in CF by entering it in a cell.

    1. Use a Formula that is Based on Another Cell

    Yes, you can apply conditional formatting based on another cell’s value. If you look at the below example, we have added a simple formula that is based on another cell. And if the value of that linked cell meets the condition specified, you’ll get conditional formatting.

    apply conditional formatting with a formula using another cell

    When achievement will be below 75%, it will highlight in red color.

    apply conditional formatting with a formula using another cell with percentage 75

    2. Conditional Formatting using IF

    Whenever I think about conditions, the first thing that comes to my mind is using the IF function. And the best part of this function is, that it fits perfectly in conditional formatting. Let me show you an example:

    using formulas to apply conditional formatting with if

    Here, we have used the IF to create a condition and the condition is when the count of “Done” in range B3:B9 is equal to the count of tasks in the range A3:A9, then the final status will appear.

    this formula in conditional formatting will format cell when all the tasks are done

    2. Conditional Formatting with Multiple Conditions

    You can create multiple checks in conditions to apply to the format. Once all the conditions or one of the conditions will meet, conditional formatting will apply to the cell. Look at the below example where we have used the average temperature of my town.

    And we have used a simply combined IF-AND to highlight the months when the temperature is pretty pleasant. Months where the temperature is between 15 Celsius to 35 Celsius, will get colored.

    use if and formula in conditional formatting to highlight cell with temperatures

    Just like this, you can also use if with or function.

    4. Highlight Alternate Rows with Conditional Formatting

    To highlight every alternate row you can use the following formula n CF.

    =INT(MOD(ROW(),2))

    By using this formula, every row whose number is odd will be highlighted. And, if you want to do vice versa you can use the following formula.

    table with highlighted alternate rows using formula in conditional formatting

    =INT(MOD(ROW()+1,2))

    The same kind of formula can use for columns (odd and even) as well.

    =INT(MOD(COLUMN(),2))

    And for even columns.

    =INT(MOD(COLUMN()+1,2))

    use conditional formatting highlight column alternate

    5. Highlight Cells with Errors using CF

    Now let’s come to another example where we will check whether a cell contains an error or not. What we need to do is just insert a formula in conditional formatting that can check the condition and return the result in TRUE or FALSE. You can even verify cells for numbers, text, or some specific values as well.

    highlight errors from cells using conditional formatting

    6. Create a Checklist with Conditional Formatting

    Now let’s add some creativity to intelligence. You have already learned how to use a formula that is based on another cell. Here we have linked a checkbox with the B1 cell and further linked the B1 with the formula used in conditional formatting for cell A1.

    checklist using conditional formatting and checkbox

    Now, if you tick mark the checkbox, the value of cell B1 will turn into TRUE and cell A1 gets it conditional formatting [strikethrough].

    a dynamic checklist using formulas in conditional formatting

    Points to Remember

    1. Your formula should be a logical formula, which leads to a result as TRUE or FALSE.
    2. Try not to overload your data with conditional formatting.
    3. Always use relative and absolute references in a proper sense.

    Sample File

    Download this sample file from here to learn more.

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    ⇠ Back to Advanced Excel Tutorials

    When working with formulas, there is always a possibility that someone (or even you) may delete a cell (or clear the contents of a cell/range) that has formulas in it.

    Wouldn’t it be better if these cells with formulas are highlighted or formatted in a way that makes these stand out? This would help ensure you don’t end up deleting these cells by mistake.

    In this tutorial, I will show you how to auto-format formulas in Excel (i.e., highlight the cells with formulas).

    So let’s get started!

    Autoformat Formulas using Conditional Formatting

    The easiest way to autoformat cells with formulas is to use conditional formatting.

    If you can somehow identify cells that have formulas, you can easily format these differently using conditional formatting.

    And this is where you can use the ISFORMULA function, a function that was introduced in Excel 2013.

    The ISFORMULA function checks whether a cell has a formula in it or not, and if it has a formula, then it returns TRUE (else FALSE).

    Below are the steps to use this function in Conditional Formatting to autoformat formulas in Excel:

    1. Select the dataset in which you want to format the cells with formulas
    2. Click the Home tabClick the Home tab
    3. In the Styles group, click on Conditional FormattingClick on Conditional formatting
    4. Click on New RuleClick on New Rule
    5. In the New Formatting Rule dialog box that opens, select ‘Use a formula to determine which cells to format’Select Use Formula to Determine which cells to format
    6. In the formula field, enter the formula =ISFORMULA(A1)Enter the Formula for the condition
    7. Click on the Format buttonClick on the Fomrnat Button
    8. In the Format Cells dialog box that opens, specify the formatting that you want to apply to the cells with formulas. In my case, I am using the orange cell fill colorSelect the color to autoformat formulas and then click on OK
    9. Click OK

    The above steps would instantly autoformat all the cells that have a formula in it.

    Autoformat Formulas result after using conditional formatting

    Not only this, in case you change any of the cells and add a formula to it, the color would automatically change. Since conditional formatting is dynamic and checks for each cell every time there is a change in the worksheet, the above steps make sure cells are automatically highlighted.

    While this is my preferred method to autoformat formulas in Excel, there is another way as well.

    Also read: How to Strikethrough in Excel (5 Ways + Shortcuts)

    Autoformat Formulas using Go To Special

    Unlike the Conditional formatting method, this one is not dynamic.

    So when you do this once, it will select all the cells with formulas and you can format them at one go. But if now you change any cell and add a formula, that cell will not get highlighted.

    Below are the steps to use Go To Special to select all cells with Formulas and then format these:

    1. Select the dataset in which you want to format the cells with formulas
    2. Hit the F5 key – this will open the Go To dialog box
    3. Click on the Special buttonClick the Special button
    4. In the Go To Special dialog box, Click on FormulasIn the Go To Special dialog box, click on Formulas
    5. Click OK

    The above steps would select all the cells that have formulas in it. Once these cells are selected, you can apply whatever formatting you want. For example, you can apply a cell color or can change the font to bold.

    As I mentioned, now if you add a new formula to the range, it will not get autoformatted. You will have to repeat the same process again.

    Format Formulas using VBA

    Another quick method to quickly format cells with formulas is by using VBA.

    This method does exactly the same thing as the one the previous one (using Go To Special), but with a single line of code.

    Below is the VBA code that will instantly highlight all the cells that have formulas in it in yellow color:

    Selection.SpecialCells(xlCellTypeFormulas, 23).Interior.Color = vbYellow

    This code first selects all the cells that have formulas and then applies the yellow color (specified by vbYellow).

    Here are the steps to use this VBA macro code:

    1. Right-click on the active sheet tab name (the one where you have the data with formulas that you want to format).
    2. Click on View CodeRight click and then click on view tab
    3. If you don’t see the ‘Immediate window’ in the VB Editor already, click on the ‘View’ option in the menu and then click on ‘Immediate Window’Click on VIew and then click on Immediate window
    4. Copy and paste the above VBA code in the ‘Immediate Window’Copy paste code in immediate window
    5. Place the cursor at the end of the line
    6. Hit the Enter key

    The above code first identifies all the cells with formulas and then applies the yellow color. You can modify the code in case you want to apply some other type of formatting.

    So these are two simple ways to quickly autoformat formulas in Excel.

    Hope you found this tutorial useful!

    You may also like the following Excel tutorials:

    • How to Format Phone Numbers in Excel
    • How to Clear Contents in Excel without Deleting Formulas
    • How to Delete a Comment in Excel (or Delete ALL Comments)
    • Excel Showing Formula Instead of Result
    • SUMPRODUCT vs SUMIFS Function in Excel
    • How to Convert Decimal to Fraction in Excel
    • How to Shade Every Other Row in Excel
    • How to Autofill Dates in Excel (Autofill Months/Years)
    • How to Apply Comma Style in Excel
    • How to Increase/Decrease Indent in Excel? (Easy Shortcut)

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