Bar chart from Google Sheets

tl;drIn Google Sheets, select two columns (label + value), copy, paste into the free bar chart maker, and export. Faster and cleaner than Sheets' own chart editor for one-off charts.

Why use an external tool?

Google Sheets has a built-in chart editor, and for live dashboards it's fine. For one-off charts that go into slides, reports, or articles, an external tool produces cleaner output faster. The bar chart maker has sensible defaults (no gridline overload, no 3D, one color) that Sheets makes you set every time.

The copy-paste workflow

Open your Google Sheet. Highlight the cells — typically two columns: labels in one, values in the other. Copy with cmd-C / ctrl-C. Open makebarchart.com and paste into the data box. The tool reads the tab-separated clipboard payload Sheets writes.

Embedding back into a doc

Once you have an SVG, you can drag it into a Google Doc, Slide, or back into a Sheet. SVGs render crisply at any zoom level. PNGs work too, but choose SVG when the chart will be scaled — slides at 1080p one day, 4K the next.

Make this chart on makebarchart.com.

Open the maker

When to use Sheets' built-in chart instead

When the chart needs to update as the data changes. When the chart is embedded in a published Sheet that others view live. When you're in the middle of exploratory analysis and want a quick visual without leaving the tab. The bar chart maker is for finished charts.