Bar charts vs tables: when to keep the table

Published

tl;drBar charts are for comparison and pattern recognition. Tables are for lookup and precision. If your reader will look up specific numbers, keep the table. If they'll compare across rows, use a chart. If they need both, use a chart with a small data table beneath.

What bar charts do well

Make comparisons easy. Reveal patterns. Highlight outliers. Compress 30 rows of data into a single visual you can read in two seconds. The eye is good at lengths; that's the whole bet.

What tables do well

Show exact values. Allow precise comparisons of small differences. Let readers look up a specific row. Show many columns at once (charts max out at 2-3 series before becoming a mess). Survive being printed and read in detail.

The hybrid

Many of the best business slides have a chart at the top with a small data table below. The chart carries the message; the table carries the precision. Readers who only need the message glance at the chart; readers who need the numbers scan the table.

A test

Ask: "What will the reader do with this?" If the answer is "compare two things," use a chart. If the answer is "find a specific value," use a table. If the answer is "both," put both on the slide.

When tables fail

When the reader has to do the chart's job in their head — picking which row is biggest from a list of 25 numbers, eyeballing differences across rows, spotting a trend in a column. That's where bar charts pay off. The bigger the dataset, the worse a table gets, and the better a chart looks.