How to Make Drop Down List in Excel

Have you ever asked yourself how to make the drop down list in excel? We did too. Today, we’re going to share with you one of the most efficient ways to create this type of list in Microsoft Excel.

Almost every single time I’ve had to create report in Excel, I lose count of the number of times I’ve broken one of my most important rules: how to put a drop down list into an Excel spreadsheet. Let me just say that it is my most important rule. It has made my life so much easier and saved me so much time.

Maybe you’ve tried to enter a condition in one cell and a value in another. Or perhaps you have a large list of names that you need to do something with, but you’re not sure how to handle it. The Excel Data Validation option can show you how to do these things and more. In this tutorial, I’ll show you the basics of how the feature works and give you some helpful tips on using it.< 

An Excel drop down list or dropdown menu can make it easier for the average Microsoft Excel user to enter data on a worksheet or workbook. Using a drop down menu in web forms, surveys, or polls can limit the entry choices for a selected cell, speeding data entry and reducing data entry error. In this Excel tip, we’ll show you a quick and easy way to create a dropdown list or drop down menu using the spreadsheet application’s Data Validation feature.

To create a drop down list in Excel, you need two things: A list of values (contained within a cell range) and a blank cell to use as the data entry cell.

Figure A shows a simple drop down list in an Excel sheet. To use the drop down menu shown here, someone would place the cursor over the blank, data-entry cell (E4 in this example) and click a drop down arrow to display the list of values shown in the cell range A1:A4. If a user tries to enter something that isn’t an item within that list of values, Excel rejects the entry.

You can follow along with the steps in this tip by creating a new sheet with data similar to the one shown in Figure A, downloading our demonstration .xlsx and .xls files, or using your own worksheet and data.

Figure A

To add the drop down list in our example to an Excel sheet, do the following:

  1. Create the data validation list in cells A1:A4. Similarly, you can enter the items in a single row, such as A1:D1.
  2. Select cell E4. (You can position the drop down list in most any cell or even multiple cells.)
  3. Choose Data Validation from the Data ribbon menu.
  4. Choose List from the Allow option’s drop down list. (See, they’re everywhere.)
  5. Click the Source control box and drag the cursor to highlight the cells A1:A4. Alternately, simply enter the reference (=$A$1:$A$4).
  6. Make sure the In-cell dropdown option is checked. If you uncheck this option, Excel still forces users to enter only list values (A1:A4), but it won’t present a drop down list.
  7. Click OK.

SEE: How to create a drop-down list in Google Sheets (TechRepublic)

You can add the drop down list to multiple Excel cells. Select the range of data input cells (step 2) instead of a single Excel cell. It even works for noncontiguous Excel cells. Hold down the Shift key while you click the appropriate Excel cells.

A few quick notes:

  • You can only see the drop down box if you click on the Excel cell used for data entry.
  • Your users can now only choose one of the options in the drop down. If they try to enter their own data, then they’ll receive an error message.
  • You can copy-and-paste this drop down cell to any other Excel cells in your spreadsheet, and you can create as many different drop downs like this as you’d like.

SEE: 10 Excel time-savers you might not know about (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

A Microsoft Excel bonus tip

This Excel tip is featured in the free PDF 30 things you should never do in Microsoft Office.

Rely on multiple links

Links between two Excel workbooks are common and useful. But multiple links where values in workbook1 depend on values in workbook2, which links to workbook3, and so on, are hard to manage and unstable. Users forget to close files, and sometimes they even move them. If you’re the only person working with those linked Excel workbooks, you might not run into trouble, but if other users are reviewing and modifying them, you’re asking for trouble. If you truly need that much linking, you might consider a new design.

Get more Excel tips

Read 56 Excel tips every user should master and the tutorials on how to add a condition to a drop down list in Excelhow to add color to a drop down list in Excelhow to create an Excel drop down list from another tabhow to change an Excel conditional formatting on the fly and how to combine Excel’s VLOOKUP() function with a combo box for enhanced searching. Also, check out this free PDF download: 13 handy Excel data entry shortcuts

More on dropdown

Create a drop-down list

You can make a worksheet more efficient by providing drop-down lists. Someone using your worksheet clicks an arrow, and then clicks an entry in the list.

  1. Select the cells that you want to contain the lists.
  2. On the ribbon, click DATA > Data Validation.
  3. In the dialog, set Allow to List.
  4. Click in Source, type the text or numbers (separated by commas, for a comma-delimited list) that you want in your drop-down list, and click OK.

Conclusion

You can create a drop down list in Excel just by copying and pasting values into cells. There’s no need to select special data tab and no need to mess with your head to create a drop down list while looking at the screen. All you need is to know a few tricks. Follow this guide to make a drop down list easily in Excel.

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