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Two ways to change background color in Excel

Oct based on cell value


18 by Svetlana Cheusheva | updated on August 21, 2022

In this article, you will find two quick ways to change the background color of cells based on value in Excel 2016, 2013
and 2010. Also, you will learn how to use Excel formulas to change the color of blank cells or cells with formula errors.

Everyone knows that changing the background color of a single cell or a range of data in Excel is easy as clicking
the "Fill color" button . But what if you want to change the background color of all cells with a certain value?
Moreover, what if you want the background color to change automatically along with the cell value's changes?
Further in this article you will find answers to these questions and learn a couple of useful tips that will help you
choose the right method for each particular task.

Change the background color of cells based on value (dynamically) - The background color will change
automatically when the cell value changes.

Change a cell's color based on its current value (statically) - Once set, the background color will not change no
matter how the cell's value changes.

Change color of special cells (blanks / with errors / with formulas)

How to change a cell's color based on value in Excel dynamically


The background color will change dependent on the cell's value.

Task: You have a table or range of data, and you want to change the background color of cells based on cell
values. Also, you want the color to change dynamically reflecting the data changes.

Solution: You need to use Excel conditional formatting to highlight the values greater than X, less than Y or between
X and Y.

Suppose you have a list of gasoline prices in different states and you want the prices greater than USD 3.7 to be
of the color red and equal to or less than USD 3.45 to be of the color green.
Note: The screenshots for this example were captured in Excel 2010, however the buttons, dialogs and
settings are the same or nearly the same in Excel 2016 and Excel 2013.

Okay, here is what you do step-by-step:

1. Select the table or range where you want to change the background color of cells. In this example, we've
selected $B$2:$H$10 (the column names and the first column listing the state names are excluded from the
selection).

2. Navigate to the Home tab, Styles group, and choose Conditional Formatting > New Rule….

3. In the New Formatting Rule dialog box, select "Format only cells that contain" under "Select a Rule Type" box in
the upper part of the dialog box.

4. In the lower part of the dialog box under "Format Only Cells with section", set the rule conditions. We choose to
format only cells with a Cell Value - greater than - 3.7, as you can see in the screenshot below.
Then click the Format… button to choose what background color to apply when the above condition is met.

5. In the Format Cells dialog box, switch to the Fill tab and select the color of your choice, the reddish color in our
case, and click OK.
6. Now you are back to the New Formatting Rule window and the preview of your format changes is displayed in
the Preview box. If everything is Okay, click the OK button.
The result of your formatting will look similar to this:

Since we need to apply one more condition, i.e. change the background of cells with values equal to or less
than 3.45 to the green color, click the New Rule button again and repeat steps 3 - 6 setting the required
condition. Here is the Preview of our second conditional formatting rule:

When you are done, click the OK button. What you have now is a nicely formatted table that lets you see the
highest and lowest gas prices across different states at a glance. Lucky they are in Texas :)
Tip: You can use the same method to change the font color based on the cell's value. To do this, simply
switch to the Font tab in the Format Cells dialog box that we discussed in step 5 and choose your preferred
font color.

How to permanently change a cell's color based on its current value


Once set, the background color will not change no matter how the cell's contents might change in the future.

Task: You want to color a cell based on its current value and wish the background color to remain the same even
when the cell value's changes.

Solution: Find all cells with a certain value or values using Excel's Find All function or Select Special Cells add-in, and
then change the format of found cells using the Format Cells feature.

This is one of those rare tasks that are not covered in Excel help files, forums and blogs and for which there is no
straightforward solution. And this is understandable, because this task is not typical. And still, if you need to
change the background color of cells statically i.e. once and forever unless you change it manually again, proceed
with the following steps.

Find and select all cells that meet a certain condition


There may be several possible scenarios depending on what kind of values you are looking for.
If you need to color cells with a particular value, e.g. 50, 100 or 3.4, go to the Home tab, Editing group, and click
Find Select > Find….

Enter the needed values and click the Find All button.

Tip: Click the Options button in the right-hand part of the Find and Replace dialog to get a number of advanced
search options, such as "Match Case" and "Match entire cell content". You can use wildcard characters, such as
an asterisk (*) to find any string of characters or a question mark (?) to find any single character.

In our previous example, if we needed to find all gas prices between 3.7 and 3.799, we would specify the following
search criteria:
Now select any of the found items in the lower part of the Find and Replace dialog window by clicking on it and
then press Ctrl + A to select all found entries. After that click the Close button.
This is how you select all cells with a certain value(s) using the Find All function in Excel.

However, what we actually need is to find all gas prices higher than 3.7 and regrettably Excel's Find and Replace
dialog does not allow for such things.

Luckily, there is another tool that can handle such complex conditions. The Select Special Cells add-in lets you
find all values in a specified range, e.g. between -1 and 45, get the maximum / minimum value in a column, row or
range, find cells by font color, fill color and much more.
You click the Select by Value button on the ribbon and then specify your search criteria on the add-in's pane, in
our example we are looking for values greater than 3.7. Click the Select button and in a second you will have a
result like this:

If you are interested to try the Select Special Cells add-in, you can download an evaluation version here.

Change the background color of selected cells using "Format Cells" dialog
Now that all cells with a specified value or values are selected (either by using Excel's Find and Replace or Select
Special Cells add-in) what is left for you to do is force the background color of selected cells to change when a
value changes.
Open the Format Cells dialog by pressing Ctrl + 1 (you can also right click any of selected cells and choose
"Format Cells…" from the pop-up menu, or go to Home tab > Cells group > Format > Format Cells…) and make all
format changes you want. We will choose to change the background color in orange this time, just for a change :)

If you want to alter the background color only without any other format changes, then you can simply click the Fill
color button and choose the color to your liking.

Here is the result of our format changes in Excel:


Unlike the previous technique with conditional formatting, the background color set in this way will never change
again without your notice, no matter how the values change.

Change background color for special cells (blanks, with formula errors)
Like in the previous example, you can change the background color of special cells in two ways, dynamically and
statically.

Use Excel formula to change background color of special cells


A cell's color will change automatically based on the cell's value.

This method provides a solution that you will most likely need in 99% of cases, i.e. the background color of cells
will change according to the conditions you set.

We are going to use the gas prices table again as an example, but this time a couple of more states are included
and some cells are empty. See how you can detect those blank cells and change their background color.

1. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click Conditional Formatting > New Rule… (see step 2 of How to
dynamically change a cell color based on value for step-by-step guidance).

2. In the "New Formatting Rule" dialog, select the option "Use a formula to determine which cells to format". Then
enter one of the following formulas in the "Format values where this formula is true" field:

=IsBlank()- to change the background color of blank cells.

=IsError() - to change the background color of cells with formulas that return errors.

Since we are interested in changing the color of empty cells, enter the formula =IsBlank(), then place the
cursor between parentheses and click the Collapse Dialog button in the right-hand part of the window to
select a range of cells, or you can type the range manually, e.g. =IsBlank(B2:H12).
3. Click the Format… button and choose the needed background color on the Fill tab (for detailed instructions,
see step 5 of "How to dynamically change a cell color based on value") and then click OK.

The preview of your conditional formatting rule will look similar to this:
4. If you are happy with the color, click the OK button and you'll see the changes immediately applied to your
table.

Change the background color of special cells statically


Once changed, the background color will remain the same, regardless of the cell values' changes.

If you want to change the color of blank cells or cells with formula errors permanently, follow this way.
1. Select your table or a range and press F5 to open the "Go To" dialog, and then click the "Special…" button.

2. In the "Go to Special" dialog box, check the Blanks radio button to select all empty cells.

If you want to highlight cells containing formulas with errors, choose Formulas > Errors. As you can see in the
screenshot above, a handful of other options are available to you.

3. And finally, change the background of selected cells, or make any other format customizations using the
"Format Cells" dialog as described in Changing the background of selected cells.

Just remember that formatting changes made in this way will persist even if your blank cells get filled with data or
formula errors are corrected. Of course, it's hard to imagine off the top of the head why someone may want to
have it this way, may be just for historical purposes :)

How to get most of Excel and make challenging tasks easy


As an active user of Microsoft Excel, you know that it has plenty of features. Some of them we know and love,
others are a complete mystery for an average user and various blogs, including this one, are trying to shed at
least some light on them. But! There are a few very common tasks that all of us have to perform daily and Excel
simply does not provide any features or tools to automate them or make an inch easier.

For example, if you need to check 2 worksheets for duplicates or merge rows from single or different
spreadsheets, it would take a bunch of arcane formulas or macros and still there is no guarantee you would get
the accurate results.

That was the reason why a team of our best Excel developers designed and created 60+ add-ins that we call the
Ultimate Suite for Excel. These smart tools handle the most grueling, painstaking and error-prone tasks in Excel
and ensure quickly, neatly and flawless results. Below is a short list of just some of the tasks the add-ins can help
you with:

Remove duplicates and find unique values

Merge tables and combine data from different sources

Combine duplicate rows into one

Merge cells, rows and columns

Find and replacing in all data, in all workbooks

Generate random numbers, passwords and custom lists

And much, much more.

Just try these add-ins and you will see that your Excel productivity will increase up to 50%, at the very least!

That's all for now. In my next article we will continue to explore this topic further and you will see how you can
quickly change the background color of a row based on a cell value. Hope to see you on our blog next week!

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Video: Excel conditional formatting based on another cell value

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