-
Select the cell where you want the result to appear.
-
On the Formulas tab, click More Functions, point to Statistical, and then click one of the following functions:
-
COUNTA: To count cells that are not empty
-
COUNT: To count cells that contain numbers.
-
COUNTBLANK: To count cells that are blank.
-
COUNTIF: To count cells that meets a specified criteria.
Tip: To enter more than one criterion, use the COUNTIFS function instead.
-
-
Select the range of cells that you want, and then press RETURN.
-
Select the cell where you want the result to appear.
-
On the Formulas tab, click Insert, point to Statistical, and then click one of the following functions:
-
COUNTA: To count cells that are not empty
-
COUNT: To count cells that contain numbers.
-
COUNTBLANK: To count cells that are blank.
-
COUNTIF: To count cells that meets a specified criteria.
Tip: To enter more than one criterion, use the COUNTIFS function instead.
-
-
Select the range of cells that you want, and then press RETURN.
Counting is an integral part of data analysis, whether you are tallying the head count of a department in your organization or the number of units that were sold quarter-by-quarter. Excel provides multiple techniques that you can use to count cells, rows, or columns of data. To help you make the best choice, this article provides a comprehensive summary of methods, a downloadable workbook with interactive examples, and links to related topics for further understanding.
Download our examples
You can download an example workbook that gives examples to supplement the information in this article. Most sections in this article will refer to the appropriate worksheet within the example workbook that provides examples and more information.
Download examples to count values in a spreadsheet
In this article
-
Simple counting
-
Use AutoSum
-
Add a Subtotal row
-
Count cells in a list or Excel table column by using the SUBTOTAL function
-
-
Counting based on one or more conditions
-
Video: Use the COUNT, COUNTIF, and COUNTA functions
-
Count cells in a range by using the COUNT function
-
Count cells in a range based on a single condition by using the COUNTIF function
-
Count cells in a column based on single or multiple conditions by using the DCOUNT function
-
Count cells in a range based on multiple conditions by using the COUNTIFS function
-
Count based on criteria by using the COUNT and IF functions together
-
Count how often multiple text or number values occur by using the SUM and IF functions together
-
Count cells in a column or row in a PivotTable
-
-
Counting when your data contains blank values
-
Count nonblank cells in a range by using the COUNTA function
-
Count nonblank cells in a list with specific conditions by using the DCOUNTA function
-
Count blank cells in a contiguous range by using the COUNTBLANK function
-
Count blank cells in a non-contiguous range by using a combination of SUM and IF functions
-
-
Counting unique occurrences of values
-
Count the number of unique values in a list column by using Advanced Filter
-
Count the number of unique values in a range that meet one or more conditions by using IF, SUM, FREQUENCY, MATCH, and LEN functions
-
-
Special cases (count all cells, count words)
-
Count the total number of cells in a range by using ROWS and COLUMNS functions
-
Count words in a range by using a combination of SUM, IF, LEN, TRIM, and SUBSTITUTE functions
-
-
Displaying calculations and counts on the status bar
Simple counting
You can count the number of values in a range or table by using a simple formula, clicking a button, or by using a worksheet function.
Excel can also display the count of the number of selected cells on the Excel status bar. See the video demo that follows for a quick look at using the status bar. Also, see the section Displaying calculations and counts on the status bar for more information. You can refer to the values shown on the status bar when you want a quick glance at your data and don’t have time to enter formulas.
Video: Count cells by using the Excel status bar
Watch the following video to learn how to view count on the status bar.
Use AutoSum
Use AutoSum by selecting a range of cells that contains at least one numeric value. Then on the Formulas tab, click AutoSum > Count Numbers.
Excel returns the count of the numeric values in the range in a cell adjacent to the range you selected. Generally, this result is displayed in a cell to the right for a horizontal range or in a cell below for a vertical range.
Top of Page
Add a Subtotal row
You can add a subtotal row to your Excel data. Click anywhere inside your data, and then click Data > Subtotal.
Note: The Subtotal option will only work on normal Excel data, and not Excel tables, PivotTables, or PivotCharts.
Also, refer to the following articles:
-
Outline (group) data in a worksheet
-
Insert subtotals in a list of data in a worksheet
Top of Page
Count cells in a list or Excel table column by using the SUBTOTAL function
Use the SUBTOTAL function to count the number of values in an Excel table or range of cells. If the table or range contains hidden cells, you can use SUBTOTAL to include or exclude those hidden cells, and this is the biggest difference between SUM and SUBTOTAL functions.
The SUBTOTAL syntax goes like this:
SUBTOTAL(function_num,ref1,[ref2],…)
To include hidden values in your range, you should set the function_num argument to 2.
To exclude hidden values in your range, set the function_num argument to 102.
Top of Page
Counting based on one or more conditions
You can count the number of cells in a range that meet conditions (also known as criteria) that you specify by using a number of worksheet functions.
Video: Use the COUNT, COUNTIF, and COUNTA functions
Watch the following video to see how to use the COUNT function and how to use the COUNTIF and COUNTA functions to count only the cells that meet conditions you specify.
Top of Page
Count cells in a range by using the COUNT function
Use the COUNT function in a formula to count the number of numeric values in a range.
In the above example, A2, A3, and A6 are the only cells that contains numeric values in the range, hence the output is 3.
Note: A7 is a time value, but it contains text (a.m.), hence COUNT does not consider it a numerical value. If you were to remove a.m. from the cell, COUNT will consider A7 as a numerical value, and change the output to 4.
Top of Page
Count cells in a range based on a single condition by using the COUNTIF function
Use the COUNTIF function function to count how many times a particular value appears in a range of cells.
Top of Page
Count cells in a column based on single or multiple conditions by using the DCOUNT function
DCOUNT function counts the cells that contain numbers in a field (column) of records in a list or database that match conditions that you specify.
In the following example, you want to find the count of the months including or later than March 2016 that had more than 400 units sold. The first table in the worksheet, from A1 to B7, contains the sales data.
DCOUNT uses conditions to determine where the values should be returned from. Conditions are typically entered in cells in the worksheet itself, and you then refer to these cells in the criteria argument. In this example, cells A10 and B10 contain two conditions—one that specifies that the return value must be greater than 400, and the other that specifies that the ending month should be equal to or greater than March 31st, 2016.
You should use the following syntax:
=DCOUNT(A1:B7,»Month ending»,A9:B10)
DCOUNT checks the data in the range A1 through B7, applies the conditions specified in A10 and B10, and returns 2, the total number of rows that satisfy both conditions (rows 5 and 7).
Top of Page
Count cells in a range based on multiple conditions by using the COUNTIFS function
The COUNTIFS function is similar to the COUNTIF function with one important exception: COUNTIFS lets you apply criteria to cells across multiple ranges and counts the number of times all criteria are met. You can use up to 127 range/criteria pairs with COUNTIFS.
The syntax for COUNTIFS is:
COUNTIFS(criteria_range1, criteria1, [criteria_range2, criteria2],…)
See the following example:
Top of Page
Count based on criteria by using the COUNT and IF functions together
Let’s say you need to determine how many salespeople sold a particular item in a certain region or you want to know how many sales over a certain value were made by a particular salesperson. You can use the IF and COUNT functions together; that is, you first use the IF function to test a condition and then, only if the result of the IF function is True, you use the COUNT function to count cells.
Notes:
-
The formulas in this example must be entered as array formulas. If you have opened this workbook in Excel for Windows or Excel 2016 for Mac and want to change the formula or create a similar formula, press F2, and then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter to make the formula return the results you expect. In earlier versions of Excel for Mac, use +Shift+Enter.
-
For the example formulas to work, the second argument for the IF function must be a number.
Top of Page
Count how often multiple text or number values occur by using the SUM and IF functions together
In the examples that follow, we use the IF and SUM functions together. The IF function first tests the values in some cells and then, if the result of the test is True, SUM totals those values that pass the test.
Example 1
The above function says if C2:C7 contains the values Buchanan and Dodsworth, then the SUM function should display the sum of records where the condition is met. The formula finds three records for Buchanan and one for Dodsworth in the given range, and displays 4.
Example 2
The above function says if D2:D7 contains values lesser than $9000 or greater than $19,000, then SUM should display the sum of all those records where the condition is met. The formula finds two records D3 and D5 with values lesser than $9000, and then D4 and D6 with values greater than $19,000, and displays 4.
Example 3
The above function says if D2:D7 has invoices for Buchanan for less than $9000, then SUM should display the sum of records where the condition is met. The formula finds that C6 meets the condition, and displays 1.
Important: The formulas in this example must be entered as array formulas. That means you press F2 and then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter. In earlier versions of Excel for Mac use +Shift+Enter.
See the following Knowledge Base articles for additional tips:
-
XL: Using SUM(IF()) As an Array Function Instead of COUNTIF() with AND
-
XL: How to Count the Occurrences of a Number or Text in a Range
Top of Page
Count cells in a column or row in a PivotTable
A PivotTable summarizes your data and helps you analyze and drill down into your data by letting you choose the categories on which you want to view your data.
You can quickly create a PivotTable by selecting a cell in a range of data or Excel table and then, on the Insert tab, in the Tables group, clicking PivotTable.
Let’s look at a sample scenario of a Sales spreadsheet, where you can count how many sales values are there for Golf and Tennis for specific quarters.
Note: For an interactive experience, you can run these steps on the sample data provided in the PivotTable sheet in the downloadable workbook.
-
Enter the following data in an Excel spreadsheet.
-
Select A2:C8
-
Click Insert > PivotTable.
-
In the Create PivotTable dialog box, click Select a table or range, then click New Worksheet, and then click OK.
An empty PivotTable is created in a new sheet.
-
In the PivotTable Fields pane, do the following:
-
Drag Sport to the Rows area.
-
Drag Quarter to the Columns area.
-
Drag Sales to the Values area.
-
Repeat step c.
The field name displays as SumofSales2 in both the PivotTable and the Values area.
At this point, the PivotTable Fields pane looks like this:
-
In the Values area, click the dropdown next to SumofSales2 and select Value Field Settings.
-
In the Value Field Settings dialog box, do the following:
-
In the Summarize value field by section, select Count.
-
In the Custom Name field, modify the name to Count.
-
Click OK.
-
The PivotTable displays the count of records for Golf and Tennis in Quarter 3 and Quarter 4, along with the sales figures.
-
Top of Page
Counting when your data contains blank values
You can count cells that either contain data or are blank by using worksheet functions.
Count nonblank cells in a range by using the COUNTA function
Use the COUNTA function function to count only cells in a range that contain values.
When you count cells, sometimes you want to ignore any blank cells because only cells with values are meaningful to you. For example, you want to count the total number of salespeople who made a sale (column D).
COUNTA ignores the blank values in D3, D4, D8, and D11, and counts only the cells containing values in column D. The function finds six cells in column D containing values and displays 6 as the output.
Top of Page
Count nonblank cells in a list with specific conditions by using the DCOUNTA function
Use the DCOUNTA function to count nonblank cells in a column of records in a list or database that match conditions that you specify.
The following example uses the DCOUNTA function to count the number of records in the database that is contained in the range A1:B7 that meet the conditions specified in the criteria range A9:B10. Those conditions are that the Product ID value must be greater than or equal to 2000 and the Ratings value must be greater than or equal to 50.
DCOUNTA finds two rows that meet the conditions- rows 2 and 4, and displays the value 2 as the output.
Top of Page
Count blank cells in a contiguous range by using the COUNTBLANK function
Use the COUNTBLANK function function to return the number of blank cells in a contiguous range (cells are contiguous if they are all connected in an unbroken sequence). If a cell contains a formula that returns empty text («»), that cell is counted.
When you count cells, there may be times when you want to include blank cells because they are meaningful to you. In the following example of a grocery sales spreadsheet. suppose you want to find out how many cells don’t have the sales figures mentioned.
Note: The COUNTBLANK worksheet function provides the most convenient method for determining the number of blank cells in a range, but it doesn’t work very well when the cells of interest are in a closed workbook or when they do not form a contiguous range. The Knowledge Base article XL: When to Use SUM(IF()) instead of CountBlank() shows you how to use a SUM(IF()) array formula in those cases.
Top of Page
Count blank cells in a non-contiguous range by using a combination of SUM and IF functions
Use a combination of the SUM function and the IF function. In general, you do this by using the IF function in an array formula to determine whether each referenced cell contains a value, and then summing the number of FALSE values returned by the formula.
See a few examples of SUM and IF function combinations in an earlier section Count how often multiple text or number values occur by using the SUM and IF functions together in this topic.
Top of Page
Counting unique occurrences of values
You can count unique values in a range by using a PivotTable, COUNTIF function, SUM and IF functions together, or the Advanced Filter dialog box.
Count the number of unique values in a list column by using Advanced Filter
Use the Advanced Filter dialog box to find the unique values in a column of data. You can either filter the values in place or you can extract and paste them to a new location. Then you can use the ROWS function to count the number of items in the new range.
To use Advanced Filter, click the Data tab, and in the Sort & Filter group, click Advanced.
The following figure shows how you use the Advanced Filter to copy only the unique records to a new location on the worksheet.
In the following figure, column E contains the values that were copied from the range in column D.
Notes:
-
If you filter your data in place, values are not deleted from your worksheet — one or more rows might be hidden. Click Clear in the Sort & Filter group on the Data tab to display those values again.
-
If you only want to see the number of unique values at a quick glance, select the data after you have used the Advanced Filter (either the filtered or the copied data) and then look at the status bar. The Count value on the status bar should equal the number of unique values.
For more information, see Filter by using advanced criteria
Top of Page
Count the number of unique values in a range that meet one or more conditions by using IF, SUM, FREQUENCY, MATCH, and LEN functions
Use various combinations of the IF, SUM, FREQUENCY, MATCH, and LEN functions.
For more information and examples, see the section «Count the number of unique values by using functions» in the article Count unique values among duplicates.
Top of Page
Special cases (count all cells, count words)
You can count the number of cells or the number of words in a range by using various combinations of worksheet functions.
Count the total number of cells in a range by using ROWS and COLUMNS functions
Suppose you want to determine the size of a large worksheet to decide whether to use manual or automatic calculation in your workbook. To count all the cells in a range, use a formula that multiplies the return values using the ROWS and COLUMNS functions. See the following image for an example:
Top of Page
Count words in a range by using a combination of SUM, IF, LEN, TRIM, and SUBSTITUTE functions
You can use a combination of the SUM, IF, LEN, TRIM, and SUBSTITUTE functions in an array formula. The following example shows the result of using a nested formula to find the number of words in a range of 7 cells (3 of which are empty). Some of the cells contain leading or trailing spaces — the TRIM and SUBSTITUTE functions remove these extra spaces before any counting occurs. See the following example:
Now, for the above formula to work correctly, you have to make this an array formula, otherwise the formula returns the #VALUE! error. To do that, click on the cell that has the formula, and then in the Formula bar, press Ctrl + Shift + Enter. Excel adds a curly bracket at the beginning and the end of the formula, thus making it an array formula.
For more information on array formulas, see Overview of formulas in Excel and Create an array formula.
Top of Page
Displaying calculations and counts on the status bar
When one or more cells are selected, information about the data in those cells is displayed on the Excel status bar. For example, if four cells on your worksheet are selected, and they contain the values 2, 3, a text string (such as «cloud»), and 4, all of the following values can be displayed on the status bar at the same time: Average, Count, Numerical Count, Min, Max, and Sum. Right-click the status bar to show or hide any or all of these values. These values are shown in the illustration that follows.
Top of Page
Need more help?
You can always ask an expert in the Excel Tech Community or get support in the Answers community.
This wikiHow teaches you how to use the COUNT function in Excel to display the number of cells in a range.
Steps
-
1
Double-click your spreadsheet to open it in Excel. The contents of your spreadsheet will appear.
-
2
Click an empty cell. This cell is where the results of the COUNT function will appear.
-
3
Click the function (fx) button. It’s in the box right above your spreadsheet (toward the left side of the screen). This opens the “Insert Function” panel.
-
4
Select Recommended from the drop-down menu. This refines the list of functions.
-
5
Click COUNT in the list of functions. COUNT is now highlighted in a different color.
- The COUNT function counts the number of cells. It doesn’t add the numbers within the cells. If you want to add the numbers in the cells, use the SUM function.
-
6
Click OK. The Function Arguments panel will appear.
-
7
Click the button in the “Value1” blank. The panel will collapse.
-
8
Select the cells and press ↵ Enter. To do this, click the first cell in the range and then drag the mouse to include the rest of the cells. The cell range will appear next to “Value1” in the Function Arguments panel.
- If you want to add a second set of data to the count, click the button next to “Value2,” select additional cells, then press ↵ Enter.
-
9
Click OK. The count of selected cells now appears in the cell.
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit
About this article
Article SummaryX
1. Open your spreadsheet in Excel.
2. Click an empty cell.
3. Click the function button.
4. Select Recommended from the drop-down menu.
5. Click COUNT.
6. Click OK.
7. Click button next to «Value1.»
8. Select cells and press ENTER.
9. Click OK.
Did this summary help you?
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 189 times.
Is this article up to date?
How to Use the COUNT function in Excel (and COUNTA)
Apart from storing and manipulating numbers, sometimes, you may want to use Excel to simply count numbers.
For example, the number of students in a class, the number of items on a list, etc.
To do so, Excel offers two functions, the COUNT and the COUNTA function. Both the said functions are super easy to operate and can prove very handy. 😀
Read through this tutorial till the end to master both these functions. Also, download our free sample workbook right here to practice alongside you read.
How to use the COUNT function to count cells in Excel
The COUNT function of Excel is going to be one of the simplest functions you’d ever come across.
Take the data in the image below.
1. To count these cells, write the COUNT function as follows.
=COUNT (A1:A6)
2. Here is the count produced by Excel.
Must note how the COUNT function has ignored the blank cell in between.
Pro Tip!
Did you notice how the COUNT function gives results that are not obvious to the eyes? We can see there are five values in the above formula.
The COUNT formula, however, only returns 4 as the count.
This is because the COUNT function only counts certain values that are either:
- Numeric values
- Date and Time values
- Boolean values (TRUE/FALSE)
- Numeric values enclosed in quotation marks (like “10”)
Umbrella is a text value, hence ignored by the COUNT function.
3. If you do not have a cell range to specify, you may also specify values inside the formula separated by a comma.
=COUNT (1, 2, 12/12/22, hello)
Must know that Excel 2007 (and newer versions) can only accept up to 255 values (arguments).
Until Excel 2007, this number was only 30. 🤨
Counting cells in non-adjacent ranges
Can the COUNT function tackle non-adjacent ranges like in the image below?
1. Write the following formula.
=COUNT (A1:A5, B1:B6, C1:C10)
We have specified each non-adjacent range as a separate argument.
2. The COUNT function counts all the non-blank cells.
COUNT vs COUNTA: Count numbers or non-empty cells
What differentiates the COUNT and COUNTA functions? A few things.
1. The COUNT function only counts cells containing specified values. These values include numbers, dates, time, and logical values (TRUE / FALSE). It also counts in numerical values enclosed in Quotation marks (“”).
Any value other than these would not be counted in by the COUNT function. It also ignores any text string.
2. The COUNT function ignores any blank cell in the specified range.
3. The COUNTA function only counts all non-blank cells.
A blank cell means a cell is all blank (no value). If a cell is only apparently blank, the COUNTA function would treat it as a non-blank cell and count it in.
An apparently blank cell may be the one with space even. Or some function the result whereof is a blank cell.
How to use the COUNTA function to count non-empty cells
It’s time we see how the COUNTA function works.
The COUNTA function counts all non-blank cells (containing any values).
Let’s apply the COUNTA function to the data in the image below.
1. Write the COUNTA function as below.
= COUNTA (A1:A10)
2. COUNTA gives the results as follows.
The results show 8 cells. However, we only see 7 cells that contain values.
That’s what you see. One cell in between doesn’t have a value but a space character.
Even if a cell has a space character, the COUNTA function doesn’t treat it as a blank cell. It is included in the count of cells. 😏
The COUNTA function counts all values including text values and ERROR values. Error values include errors posed by Excel like the #NAME! error etc.
Count cells using the status bar
If you’re running out of time and want a quick count of cells containing data – this section is for you.
You can count non-blank cells in Excel without operating a function.
1. Select the cells containing data.
Navigate to the right bottom of your spreadsheet to see the count of cells.
2. Or you can select multiple column headers (or row headers). In this case, Excel will count the number of non-blank cells in each column (or row).
That’s it – Now what?
This guide teaches you the basics of the COUNT and COUNTA functions. It differentiates between them both and explains when should you use each of them.
Both the COUNT and COUNTA functions would help you in many situations. But these are only two very basic functions of Excel.
There’s much more to learn from this giant spreadsheet software. Some functions of Excel that you MUST learn are the VLOOKUP, SUMIF, and IF functions.
Register for my 30-minute free email course that is designed to offer you insights into these functions (and more).
Other resources
There are many advanced versions of the COUNT and COUNTA functions of Excel. For example the COUNTIF function and the COUNTIFS function.
The COUNTIF function counts cells that meet a single criterion. Whereas, the COUNTIFS function counts cells that meet multiple criteria. Check them out here!
Additionally, you may want to learn how to use operators in the COUNTIF Function.
Kasper Langmann2022-11-03T07:04:06+00:00
Page load link
What Is COUNT In Excel?
The COUNT function in Excel counts the number of cells containing numerical values within the given range. It always returns an integer value.
The COUNT in Excel is an inbuilt statistical function, so we can insert the formula from the “Function Library” or enter it directly in the worksheet.
For example, to count a range of cells that contain a date before April 1, 2021, the formula used is “=COUNT(“Cell Range”, “<”&DATE (2021,4,1))”. The date is entered by using the DATE functionThe date function in excel is a date and time function representing the number provided as arguments in a date and time code. The result displayed is in date format, but the arguments are supplied as integers.read more.
Table of contents
- What Is COUNT In Excel?
- Syntax Of COUNT Excel Formula
- How To Use COUNT Function In Excel?
- Examples
- The Characteristics Of The COUNT Function
- Important Things To Note
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- COUNT Function In Excel Video
- Download Template
- Recommended Articles
- In a given dataset, the COUNT function in Excel returns the count of the numeric values.
- It counts only the numbers and not the logical values, empty cells, text, or error values when the argument seems to be an array or reference.
- The usage of the COUNT and VBA (VBA Excel COUNT) functions are the same in Excel.
- The COUNTA function is a further extension of the COUNT function. It counts logical values, text, or error values. The COUNTIF function (another extension of the COUNT function) counts the numbers that meet a specified criterion.
Syntax Of COUNT Excel Formula
The syntax of the COUNT Excel formula is,
The arguments of the COUNT Excel formula are,
- value1, [value2], …, [value n]: It is a mandatory argument. It can range up to 255 values. The value can be a cell referenceCell reference in excel is referring the other cells to a cell to use its values or properties. For instance, if we have data in cell A2 and want to use that in cell A1, use =A2 in cell A1, and this will copy the A2 value in A1.read more or a range of values. It is a collection of worksheet cells containing a variety of data, out of which only the cells containing numbers are counted.
How To Use COUNT Function In Excel?
We can use the COUNT Excel function in 2 ways, namely:
- Access from the Excel ribbon.
- Enter in the worksheet manually.
Method #1 – Access from the Excel ribbon
Choose an empty cell for the result → select the “Formulas” tab → go to the “Function Library” group → click the “More Functions” option drop-down → click the “Statistical” option right arrow → select the “COUNT” function, as shown below.
The “Function Arguments” windowappears. Enter the arguments in the “Value1”, “Value2”, etc. fields, and click “OK”, as shown below.
Method #2 – Enter in the worksheet manually
- Select an empty cell for the output.
- Type =COUNT( in the selected cell. [Alternatively, type =C or =COU and double-click the COUNT function from the list of suggestions shown by Excel.
- Enter the argument as cell value or cell reference and close the brackets.
- Press the “Enter” key.
Basic Example – Count Numbers in the Given Range
Let us look at an example to apply the COUNT function to Count Numbers in the Given Range. (shown in the table below).
Select cell B10, enter the formula =COUNT(B3:B8), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The range B3:B8 contains only three numeric values. Hence, the COUNT function returns 3.
Examples
We will consider some scenarios using COUNT Function in Excel examples. Each example covers a different case, implemented using the COUNT function.
Example #1 – Count Non-empty Cells
Let us apply the COUNTA functionThe COUNTA function is an inbuilt statistical excel function that counts the number of non-blank cells (not empty) in a cell range or the cell reference. For example, cells A1 and A3 contain values but, cell A2 is empty. The formula “=COUNTA(A1,A2,A3)” returns 2.
read more to the range of cells A1:A5 provided in the below table to find the count of the number of cells that are not empty.
Select cell B1, enter the formula =COUNTA(A1:A5), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The COUNTA function counts the number of cells from A1 through A5 that contain some data. It returns the value as 4, as cells A1, A2, A3, and A4 are not empty, and only cell A5 is empty.
Example #2 – Count the Number of Valid Dates
Let us apply the COUNT function to count the number of valid dates to the range of cells C3:C8 (shown in the table below).
Select cell C10, enter the formula =COUNT(C3:C8), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The range contains dates in different formats. Out of this, only two dates are valid. Hence, the formula returns 2.
Example #3 – Multiple Parameters
Let us apply the COUNT formula to the range of excel cells C3:C7 (provided in the table below) along with another parameter that is hard-coded with a value of 5.
Select cell C11, enter the formula =COUNTA(C3:C7,5), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The number of cells (C3 through C7) with valid numeric values or dates is 2, plus 1 for the number 5. Hence the COUNT formula returns the result as 3 (cells C5, C6, and the number 5). Note that the date in cell C7 is invalid, and so is not taken into account in the given results.
Example #4 – Invalid Numbers
Let us apply the COUNT formula to the range of values B6:B8 (shown in the table below) containing invalid numbers.
Select cell B12, enter the formula =COUNTA(B6:B8), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The range does not have any valid number. Hence, the result returned by the formula is 0, indicated in cell B12.
Example #5 – Empty Range
Let us apply the COUNT function to the range of values in cells D3:D5, which is an empty range.
Select cell D10, enter the formula =COUNTA(D3:D5), and press “Enter”.
The output is shown above. The given range does not have any numbers, and it is empty. Hence, the result returned by the formula is 0, indicated in cell D10.
The Characteristics Of The COUNT Function
The features of the COUNT Excel function are listed as follows:
- It counts the list of parameters containing the logical values and text representations.
- It does not count the error values or text which cannot be converted into numbers.
- It counts only the numbers and not the logical values, empty cells, text, or error values when the argument seems to be an array or reference.
- A further extension to the COUNT function is the COUNTA function. It counts logical values, text, or error values.
- Another extension of the COUNT function is the COUNTIF function, which counts the numbers that meet a specified criterion.
Important Things To Note
- Since the COUNT function has other related functions such as COUNTA, COUNTIF, COUNTBLANK, etc., we must ensure we enter the right function name to avoid getting a “#NAME?” error.
- In a selected cell range, the function ignores the blank cells, non-numeric cells, etc.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. How to use the Excel COUNT function?
The COUNT function provides the count of cells containing numbers within the given range of cells. It also counts numeric values within the list of arguments.
The formula of the COUNT in excel is =COUNT(value 1, [value 2],……, and so on).
2. What is the COUNTIF formula?
The COUNTIF function counts cells in a range that meets a single criterion. It counts cells that contain dates, numbers, and text.
The COUNTIF formula in excel is =COUNTIF(range, condition)
Here, the range is a series of cells to count.
3. What is the difference between the COUNT and COUNTA functions in Excel?
The COUNT function is generally used to count a range of cells containing numbers or dates. It excludes blank cells. And the COUNTA function, whichstands for count all, will count the numbers, dates, text, or a range containing a mixture of all these items. It does not count blank cells.
COUNT Function In Excel Video
Download Template
This article must help understand the COUNT function in Excel with its formulas and examples. You can download the template here to use it instantly.
You can download this COUNT Formula Excel Template here – COUNT Formula Excel Template
Recommended Articles
This is a guide to the COUNT Function in Excel. Here, we count number of cells with numeric values, COUNTA, COUNTIF, examples & a downloadable template. You may also look at the below useful functions in Excel –
- Example of COUNTIF with Multiple Criteria
- INT Function in Excel (Integer)INT or integer function in excel returns the nearest integer of a given number and is used when we have many data sets and each data in a different format.read more
- AVERAGE Function in Excel
Anyone who works with large tables often knows that if you try to count specific cells manually, it’s almost impossible to avoid errors. But it doesn’t have to be that way. If you want to know how many cells contain numbers, Excel has a simple function that can help you. In Excel, COUNT immediately tells you how many cells in the selected range contain numbers. We’ll explain how it works.
Contents
- What do you need Excel’s COUNT function for?
- COUNT: syntax
- Using Excel: Examples of the COUNT function
- COUNTA & COUNTBLANK: Two related functions
What do you need Excel’s COUNT function for?
When working with Excel on a daily basis, sometimes you need to know how many cells in a table contain numbers. For example, if you’re working with revenue results, you may need to check the number of entries. The function can also be used to calculate the sum of numbers from a wide variety of values. Excel’s COUNT function only counts numbers, dates, and numbers turned into text with quotation marks.
Note
The Excel COUNT function only counts the number of cells, it does not total the values in the cells. There is another function in Excel that does that: SUMIF allows you to filter cell values by certain criteria (e.g. text criteria or special symbols like $) and then add them up.
COUNT: syntax
All you have to enter for the COUNT function is the range to analyze. Entries are made in the form of cell references. Select a from-to range separated by a colon as the function input.
=COUNT(Value1;[Value2];…)
The advantage of this function is that you can specify multiple ranges. If the cells you want Excel to check are not contiguous, you can simply specify multiple ranges and don’t need to restructure your entire table. You can integrate up to 255 additional ranges of different sizes into the COUNT function.
Using Excel: Examples of the COUNT function
The COUNT function checks a range for entries that Excel treats as numbers:
This formula gives you the number of cells containing numbers in a single row. You can also expand the search to an entire worksheet or include specific ranges if there are columns in the table you do not want to include.
You can combine COUNT with other functions. For example, you can calculate a mean from the number of cells counted in various ranges.
=AVERAGE(COUNT(B2:E5);COUNT(G2:J5);COUNT(L2:O5))
In this example, you are counting the cells with numbers in multiple ranges (independently) and then calculating the mean value.
COUNTA & COUNTBLANK: Two related functions
Count only lets you count the cells with numbers. It does not include text that is not treated as numbers or Boolean values. This allows you to analyze numbers separately from other content. However, if you want to include all values, COUNTA can help. The function’s structure is identical to the COUNT function.
For example, COUNTA can be used to display the attendance rate at meetings in a given month.
In this example, we want to count all non-blank cells and divide them by the number of all available cells. Attendance is indicated with an “x” in the respective cell. If we now format the resulting cell as a percentage, we can determine the percentage attendance rate.
However, sometimes you want to count all the cells that are empty. You can do that using Excel’s COUNTBLANK function. This function also shares the same structure as the other two functions, but can only include one argument. As a result, you can’t include multiple ranges in one function, you have to aggregate the totals.
=COUNTBLANK(B2:E5)+COUNTBLANK(G2:J5)
If you add COUNTA and COUNTBLANK, the result is always the number of cells in the range analyzed. This can be useful, for example, if we go back to our formula for calculating the attendance rate.
=COUNTA(B2:E5;G2:J5)/(COUNTA(B2:E5;G2:J5)+COUNTBLANK(B2:E5)+COUNTBLANK(G2:J5))
In this formula, you no longer need to enter the total number of cells manually. Instead, you calculate it from the total of all blank and non-blank cells.
Tip
The COUNTIF function gives you even more control when selecting criteria. For example, you can use it to have Excel search for specific terms.
Excel if-then: how the IF function works
Excel’s if-then statement is one of its most helpful formulas. In many situations, you can create a logical comparison: if A is true, then B, otherwise C. To use this useful if-then formula in Excel, you first need to understand how it works and precisely how to use it. For example, which syntax rules does the IF function follow, and how can you extend the formula?
Excel if-then: how the IF function works
Excel: The INDIRECT Function Explained
In Excel, we almost always work with cell references. Rather than entering values into formulas individually, we pull them from the cells of tables. The INDIRECT Excel function enables you to even obtain references from other cells. This can be helpful when working with multiple worksheets or when creating complex formulas, for example. We explain how to use INDIRECT in Excel.
Excel: The INDIRECT Function Explained
Excel’s WORKDAY function explained
Many people use dates regularly in Microsoft Excel. However, the problem with dates is that they don’t automatically distinguish between working days and weekends. Excel does, however, provide a function that allows you to analyze working days separately. Using Excel’s WORKDAY function, you can calculate deadlines more precisely.
Excel’s WORKDAY function explained
Excel: ROUNDDOWN – an explanation of this handy function
When performing complex calculations in tables, you can quickly produce values that are not fit for everyday use because they have far too many decimal places. The ROUNDDOWN function in Excel can help with this. It uses a simple formula to simplify your workflow. You can use it to round down any number to the desired number of decimal places.
Excel: ROUNDDOWN – an explanation of this handy function