Excel Practice Test

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What Is the Excel Logo?

The Excel logo is a green square icon featuring a bold white letter 'X' โ€” the recognisable visual mark of Microsoft Excel, the world's most widely-used spreadsheet application. Whether you're opening Excel from a Windows taskbar, a Mac Dock, a mobile home screen, or the Microsoft 365 web launcher, the green X icon is your consistent navigation point across every platform where Excel is available. The logo is deliberately simple: a strong letter, a bold colour, a clear background โ€” designed to be immediately identifiable at any size without relying on fine details that would disappear at small icon sizes.

The Excel logo is the visual icon representing Microsoft Excel โ€” the spreadsheet application that's been a core part of Microsoft Office since 1985. Today's Excel logo features a bold green square containing a stylised white 'X' on a dark background, making it one of the most recognisable icons in the business software world. If you've ever opened Microsoft 365 on any device, you've seen it: the green square icon with the white 'X' that distinguishes Excel from its Office siblings (Word's blue W, PowerPoint's red P, and Outlook's blue O).

The logo's design is deliberate. Green was chosen to visually associate Excel with financial data โ€” spreadsheets, budgets, and numbers โ€” while the 'X' character does double duty as both the first letter of 'Excel' and a reference to the grid-based nature of the application (rows and columns forming an X-like intersection). Microsoft's Office suite uses a colour-coded icon system so that users can identify each application instantly, even at small icon sizes on a taskbar or mobile home screen. Excel's green has remained consistent through multiple design iterations over the decades.

Understanding the Excel logo matters in practical contexts. If you're studying for Microsoft Office Specialist (MOS) certification exams, you need to be able to navigate the Office interface confidently โ€” including finding Excel among your installed applications. If you work in design or marketing and need to reference Microsoft Excel in a presentation or document, using the correct, current logo ensures your materials look professional and accurate. The logo has changed significantly across Excel's history, and using an outdated icon in professional materials can undermine credibility.

  • Current logo design: Dark green square with a bold white 'X' on a lighter green background inside โ€” part of Microsoft's 2019 Fluent Design refresh
  • Primary colour: Green (#217346 is the classic Excel brand green used in UI elements; the icon uses darker/lighter green variants)
  • Icon letter: Stylised 'X' โ€” represents both 'Excel' and the intersection/grid nature of spreadsheet cells
  • Office colour system: Excel = green, Word = blue, PowerPoint = orange-red, Outlook = blue, Teams = purple
  • First Excel logo: 1985 (Mac version); Windows version followed in 1987
  • Current design era: 2019 Fluent Design System icons (Microsoft 365 era)
  • Where to find official logos: Microsoft Brand Central (Microsoft's official brand resource centre)

History of the Excel Logo: How It's Changed

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Microsoft Excel launched in 1985 for the Mac and 1987 for Windows. Early versions of Excel used simple, flat icon designs typical of the era โ€” small, low-resolution icons that had to work within the display limitations of early computer monitors. The original Excel icons were basic representations of spreadsheets and documents, without the distinctive 'X' or the colour-coded system that would come later. These early logos reflected the constraints of early computing design rather than a deliberate brand strategy.

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The Office 97 and Office XP era introduced more polished icons with depth, shading, and 3D effects that were fashionable in software design throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s. Excel's icon during this period featured spreadsheet imagery โ€” a stylised grid or chart symbol โ€” in yellow and green tones, sitting on a blue or light background. The icons had drop shadows and bevelled edges characteristic of the skeuomorphic design trend of the era, attempting to make digital icons look like physical objects.

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The Office 2007 redesign introduced the Ribbon interface and also updated the application icons significantly. Excel's icon became a distinctly green document with an 'X' element โ€” the colour-coding system became more intentional and consistent across Office applications. Office 2010 and 2013 refined this further, moving toward flatter, simpler icon designs that anticipated the broader flat design movement in the industry. The green identity became firmly established during this period, and the 'X' letter became the primary visual element of the Excel brand.

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Windows 8 and Office 2013 brought a significant design shift with Metro-style flat icons โ€” clean, simple, and without the 3D effects of earlier eras. Excel's icon became a clean green square with a white 'X', dropping the shading and gradients in favour of bold, solid colours. This era established the core visual language that continues today: the green square with the 'X' is recognisable at any size, from a 16ร—16 pixel taskbar icon to a large tile on a Start screen. Office 2016 further refined this flat design approach.

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Microsoft's 2019 icon redesign โ€” part of the Fluent Design System โ€” brought the most significant visual refresh in years. The new Excel logo adds subtle depth back to the flat design: a two-toned green square (darker at the bottom-left, lighter at the top-right) with a bold white 'X' that has a slight gradient. The overall effect is modern and dimensional without the heavy skeuomorphism of earlier eras. These icons were designed to work across all screen sizes and densities, from small mobile icons to large display applications. The Microsoft 365 era icons have remained consistent and are the logos you'll see in current versions of Excel.

What the Current Excel Logo Looks Like

The current Excel logo introduced with the 2019 Fluent Design refresh uses a two-tone green square as its base. The square transitions from a deeper, richer green in the lower-left corner to a lighter, brighter green in the upper-right, creating a subtle dimensional effect without heavy gradients or shadows. On top of this green background sits a bold white 'X' shape โ€” not a simple letter X, but a carefully designed icon element with precise proportions that allow it to remain readable at icon sizes as small as 16 pixels wide while also looking sharp at large display sizes.

The 'X' in the Excel logo is distinctive from a standard X because of the way it's constructed. It's formed from two overlapping rectangular bars crossing diagonally, with a slight offset that gives it weight and presence. The white colour creates strong contrast against the green background, ensuring the icon is immediately identifiable even in peripheral vision or when scanning a crowded taskbar. This contrast-first approach to icon design reflects Microsoft's broader accessibility goals โ€” icons should be recognisable by people with varying levels of visual acuity and in varied lighting conditions.

The colour green chosen for Excel has specific brand significance within the Microsoft Office ecosystem. Green has long-standing cultural associations with finance, money, and numerical data โ€” think stock market tickers, financial dashboards, and accounting software interfaces. Microsoft's choice of green for Excel reinforces the application's primary use case at a glance: this is the tool for numbers, data, and financial work. When placed alongside Word (blue), PowerPoint (orange-red), and Teams (purple), each application's colour communicates something about its purpose and helps users navigate a multi-application environment with speed and confidence.

On mobile devices, the Excel app icon uses a rounded-square format (the 'squircle' shape standard on iOS and Android) while maintaining the same two-tone green background and white X. The desktop and web versions use a square format. Despite these minor shape adaptations for different platforms, the core visual identity โ€” green, white X โ€” remains completely consistent, demonstrating sophisticated brand discipline across a global product used by hundreds of millions of people.

Where to Find the Official Excel Logo

๐Ÿ”ด Microsoft Brand Central

Microsoft's official brand resource centre (available at microsoft.com/en-us/legal/intellectualproperty/trademarks/en-us.aspx) provides guidance on using Microsoft trademarks, including the Excel logo. For official brand assets, organisations with appropriate licensing or partnership status can request materials through Microsoft's partner programmes. Do not use unofficial logo downloads from third-party sites โ€” pixel quality, colour accuracy, and licensing compliance vary significantly.

๐ŸŸ  Microsoft 365 Admin Centre

If you're a Microsoft 365 subscriber deploying Excel across an organisation, official application icons are included with your Microsoft 365 licence. These icons appear automatically when Excel is installed on devices โ€” you don't need to source them separately. The admin centre provides guidance on deploying Office applications and their associated icons in enterprise environments.

๐ŸŸก Microsoft Partner Network

Microsoft Partners who have joined the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN) have access to official brand assets through the partner portal. These assets include product logos in formats suitable for co-marketing, websites, and presentations โ€” provided the usage complies with Microsoft's brand guidelines. Unauthorised use of Microsoft logos, including the Excel logo, is a trademark violation.

๐ŸŸข SVG Icons in Office Applications

Within Excel itself, the Insert > Icons feature provides access to Microsoft's library of SVG icons โ€” though this is a general icon library rather than specifically the Excel application logo. If you need to include Excel's logo in a presentation (say, a slide about the tools your team uses), the most reliable approach is to take a screenshot of the installed application icon at high resolution, or to use Microsoft's official media resources for press and partner materials.

Excel Logo in Context: Office Suite and Branding

๐Ÿ“‹ The Office Colour-Coding System

Microsoft Office applications use a consistent colour-coding system that allows users to identify each application at a glance. Understanding this system helps you navigate Microsoft 365 environments more efficiently โ€” particularly if you work across multiple applications daily:

  • Excel (green): Spreadsheets, data analysis, financial modelling, visualisations
  • Word (blue): Documents, reports, letters, long-form writing
  • PowerPoint (orange-red): Presentations, slide decks, visual storytelling
  • Outlook (blue, different shade): Email, calendar, contacts, tasks
  • OneNote (purple): Digital notebooks, note-taking, research organisation
  • Teams (purple): Communication, video calls, team collaboration
  • OneDrive (blue): Cloud storage, file syncing, sharing
  • SharePoint (teal): Team sites, document libraries, intranet
  • Access (red): Desktop database management

The colour system is consistent across platforms โ€” mobile apps, desktop applications, and web versions all use the same colour identity for each application.

๐Ÿ“‹ Excel in Microsoft 365 vs Standalone

Microsoft Excel is available in two primary forms today, and the logo appears slightly differently depending on the context:

  • Microsoft 365 (subscription): The full Excel application with all current features, updated continuously. The logo appears in your Start menu, taskbar, Dock (Mac), or app launcher with the current Fluent Design icon. Cloud features like co-authoring, AutoSave, and cloud storage are integrated.
  • Excel for the web: The browser-based version accessible at office.com or via Microsoft 365. The Excel logo appears in the Microsoft 365 app launcher (the waffle grid icon) alongside other web applications. The web logo uses the same green X design.
  • Excel mobile (iOS/Android): The mobile app icon uses the rounded-square format standard to each mobile platform while maintaining the same green X visual identity.
  • Legacy standalone purchases: Older perpetual licences (Office 2019, Office 2021) use versions of the same Fluent Design logo but may not update as frequently as Microsoft 365 versions.

For MOS certification study purposes, the certification tests assess your ability to use specific features of the application โ€” not to identify logos โ€” but familiarity with the Microsoft 365 interface is important for navigating efficiently during exam conditions.

How to Use the Excel Logo Correctly

Microsoft's trademarks โ€” including the Excel logo, the product name 'Microsoft Excel', and related brand assets โ€” are protected intellectual property. Using the Excel logo in any public-facing context without authorisation can constitute trademark infringement, even if your intentions are informational or educational. Most individuals and organisations will never need to reproduce the actual Excel logo; they simply use the installed application and its icon appears automatically through the operating system. But in specific contexts โ€” creating training materials, marketing presentations, or public-facing documentation โ€” questions arise about logo usage.

Microsoft provides official guidance through its Trademark and Brand Guidelines, available on the Microsoft website. The general principles are: do not alter the logo's colours, proportions, or design; do not use the logo in a way that implies Microsoft endorses your product or service; do not use the logo in materials that could reflect negatively on Microsoft or its products; and do not use the logo more prominently than your own branding if you're creating materials that reference multiple tools or platforms.

For businesses creating training materials for internal use โ€” such as a corporate Excel tutorial โ€” limited logo use is typically acceptable under fair use principles, though this varies by jurisdiction.

For journalists, bloggers, and media professionals who need product images for editorial purposes, Microsoft's News Centre (news.microsoft.com) provides approved press images of products including Office application icons. These are intended for press and editorial use and come with Microsoft's implicit approval for that context. Using a screenshot of the official installed application icon is also generally acceptable for editorial and educational content.

Third-party websites that offer 'free Excel logo downloads' vary widely in quality and legal status. Many offer the correct icon in appropriate formats (SVG, PNG), but the licensing terms for those downloads are often unclear. For any professional or commercial context, sourcing logos directly from Microsoft's official channels is always the safer approach. The specific shade of green, the proportions of the X, and the overall design quality of the official logo are often subtly but noticeably better than unofficial reproductions โ€” particularly when logos are displayed at large sizes.

Excel Logo Usage Checklist

Only use official Microsoft-sourced Excel logo files for any commercial or public-facing materials
Do not alter the Excel logo's colours, proportions, orientation, or design elements
Do not add effects (drop shadows, gradients, outlines) to the Excel logo that change its official appearance
Do not use the Excel logo in a way that suggests Microsoft endorses your product, service, or organisation
For press and editorial use, source images from Microsoft's official News Centre or use screenshots of the installed application
For internal training materials, limited logo use is typically acceptable โ€” confirm with your legal team for commercial publications
Use the current 2019 Fluent Design logo in all new materials โ€” avoid outdated versions of the Excel icon that may confuse users
Ensure sufficient contrast and clear space around the logo so it remains legible at the size you're using it

Excel Logo vs Competitors: Brand Recognition

Pros

  • The green X is one of the most immediately recognisable software icons globally โ€” decades of market presence have made the Excel logo synonymous with 'spreadsheet' in many users' minds
  • Consistent colour coding across the Office suite makes navigation intuitive โ€” green = Excel is a learned association that works even for users who aren't consciously aware of the system
  • The 2019 Fluent Design refresh modernised the logo without losing brand recognition โ€” the evolution was confident enough to feel fresh while maintaining continuity
  • The logo works effectively at all sizes โ€” from 16px taskbar icons to large marketing displays โ€” a sign of strong icon design fundamentals
  • The green-X system is accessible and distinct for most users with colour vision differences, as shape (the X) provides identification independent of the green colour

Cons

  • Excel and Outlook both use shades of blue-adjacent colours (Excel is green, Outlook is a specific blue), which can create occasional confusion at small icon sizes for new users who haven't yet memorised the Office colour system
  • The Fluent Design system icons look very similar to competitors' product icons in style (Google Workspace, LibreOffice, Notion all use similar flat icon aesthetics), reducing the distinctiveness advantage that earlier era logos had
  • Frequent logo updates over Excel's history have created inconsistency in documentation and training materials โ€” older textbooks, help sites, and tutorials often show outdated icons that don't match what users see in current versions

Finding Excel on Your Computer Using the Logo

One of the most practical uses of knowing what the Excel logo looks like is simply finding the application on your computer or device. If you're new to Excel or working on an unfamiliar machine, the green X icon is your navigation target. On Windows, Excel appears in the Start menu under the 'Microsoft 365' folder (or 'Microsoft Office' in older installations) and may be pinned to your taskbar. On Mac, it appears in the Applications folder and the Dock. On iOS and Android, the green X appears among your installed apps.

If Excel doesn't appear on your device and you need it, the logo's absence is a signal to check your Microsoft 365 subscription status. Go to office.com and sign in with your Microsoft account โ€” if your subscription is active, you can install Excel from there. The web version of Excel (Excel for the web) is accessible through any browser at no additional cost for Microsoft 365 subscribers, using the same green X icon in the app launcher at the top of the page.

It's also worth noting that the Excel icon on your device is a live signal of which version you have installed. If you're studying for the Microsoft Office Specialist (MOS) Excel certification, the exam tests specific features that may differ between Excel versions โ€” 2019, 2021, and Microsoft 365 each have slightly different feature sets.

The icon itself looks the same across these versions, but if your organisation or school uses a specific version, making sure you're practising on that version (rather than a different one) matters for exam preparation. Opening Excel and checking Help > Account shows you exactly which version and build you're running.

For users studying for Microsoft Office Specialist (MOS) Excel certification, being able to open Excel quickly and navigate its interface efficiently is a fundamental skill. During the actual certification exam, you work in a live Excel environment rather than answering multiple-choice questions about features โ€” so comfort with launching and navigating the application contributes to your exam performance. Knowing the Excel logo, finding the application, and opening it with confidence are the very first steps in every Excel session you'll ever have, whether in practice or examination conditions.

Excel Practice Test โ€” Microsoft Excel Certification Questions

Microsoft Excel: By the Numbers

1985
Year Microsoft Excel first launched โ€” initially for the Apple Macintosh, with the Windows version following in 1987 and establishing Excel as the dominant spreadsheet application
750M+
Estimated number of Microsoft Excel users worldwide as of recent years โ€” making it one of the most widely-used software applications in human history across offices, schools, and homes
2019
Year of the most recent major Excel logo redesign โ€” part of Microsoft's Fluent Design System refresh that updated icons across all Microsoft 365 applications for a more modern look
5
Major logo design eras Excel has gone through since 1985 โ€” from early flat icons to skeuomorphic 3D designs to the modern Fluent Design flat icon with subtle depth used today
#1
Excel's rank as the world's most widely-used spreadsheet application โ€” used for everything from household budgets to complex financial models at major banks and investment firms
MOS
Microsoft Office Specialist certification โ€” the official Microsoft credential for Excel proficiency, recognised by employers worldwide as validation of practical Excel skills

Excel Logo in Professional Documents and Presentations

A common scenario where the Excel logo matters in practice is when creating professional materials that reference the tools your organisation or team uses. Technology stack slides in company presentations, tool onboarding documentation, job postings that list required software skills, and training guides all frequently include software logos alongside text descriptions. In these contexts, using the correct, current Excel logo signals attention to detail and professionalism.

When inserting the Excel logo into a PowerPoint presentation (or Google Slides, Keynote, or any other presentation tool), the key technical considerations are file format and transparency. Use an SVG or PNG file with a transparent background rather than a JPEG, which will add a white rectangle behind the logo rather than allowing it to sit cleanly against your slide background.

Microsoft's official press images are typically provided in formats appropriate for these uses. If you're working at small sizes โ€” say, a row of software logos in a footer โ€” the simple green square with the white X is distinctive enough to remain recognisable at 30โ€“40 pixels wide.

For word-processed documents, inserting the logo as an image works well for formal reports or proposals that reference Excel as a tool. Keep the logo proportionally scaled โ€” don't distort it by dragging one corner without holding Shift. Maintain some white space around the logo so it doesn't appear cramped against surrounding text. These are basic graphic design principles, but they matter when the logo is one of several being displayed together in a comparison or stack list context.

Training materials and e-learning content that teach Excel to new users commonly include the Excel logo prominently โ€” both as a navigation aid ('look for this icon to open Excel') and as a branding element that helps learners associate the visual identity with the tool they're learning.

In these educational contexts, using an outdated Excel logo can genuinely confuse learners who then look for a different-looking icon on their actual devices. Keeping screenshots and logos current with the installed version of Excel is good training design practice and reduces the support burden on instructors who'd otherwise field questions from learners who can't find the correct application on their machine.

Excel Logo vs Google Sheets and Other Spreadsheet Apps

The visual identity of a spreadsheet application is more commercially significant than it might initially appear. When organisations choose between Excel and its competitors, the logo appears in vendor evaluations, procurement materials, training documentation, and IT asset management systems.

Brand familiarity shapes the perception of product quality โ€” a well-designed, widely-recognised logo like Excel's green X carries implicit authority that newer competitors have to work hard to match. That's part of why newer spreadsheet tools invest significantly in icon design even when their features are strong โ€” the logo is often the first and most repeated touchpoint in a user's experience of any software.

Microsoft Excel and Google Sheets are the two dominant spreadsheet applications used in professional environments today, and their logos reflect their very different brand positions. Excel's green X communicates decades of established authority โ€” it's a logo that professionals have associated with serious data work since the late 1980s. Google Sheets uses a green icon as well (a document outline with a grid pattern), reflecting Google's awareness that green has become culturally associated with spreadsheets. Despite both using green, the two logos are distinct enough to avoid confusion: Excel's bold X versus Sheets' document shape.

LibreOffice Calc โ€” the open-source spreadsheet alternative โ€” uses a green-tinted icon as well, continuing the green-equals-spreadsheets convention across the industry. Apple Numbers, by contrast, uses a teal-to-green gradient with a bar chart icon, opting for a visual representation of data output rather than an abstract letter or document shape. Zoho Sheet uses an orange-to-red icon, deliberately distinguishing itself from the green convention.

For professionals, knowing which logo belongs to which application matters when screenshots, tutorials, or device setups show multiple spreadsheet applications installed. On a Mac with both Excel and Google Sheets in the browser bookmarks, the visual distinction helps avoid accidentally opening the wrong application. In enterprise environments where standardising on a single spreadsheet tool is important for collaboration and file compatibility, the logos serve as immediate visual reminders of which application is being used โ€” and which one to open when you need to share a file with a specific colleague or team.

Excel Certification Practice Questions โ€” MOS Excel Test Prep

Excel Logo Questions and Answers

What does the Excel logo look like?

The current Excel logo (introduced in 2019 as part of Microsoft's Fluent Design refresh) is a square icon with a two-tone green background โ€” darker green in the lower-left, lighter green in the upper-right โ€” with a bold white 'X' shape overlaid on it. The 'X' is formed from two thick diagonal bars crossing at the centre. This logo appears on all current versions of Microsoft Excel across Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, and the web version at office.com.

Why is the Excel logo green?

Microsoft chose green for Excel's logo to visually associate the application with financial data, spreadsheets, and numerical work โ€” green has long-standing cultural associations with money, finance, and numerical display (think stock market tickers and financial dashboards). Excel is the most finance-focused of the core Office applications, and the green colour communicates that purpose at a glance. The green also serves the Office suite's colour-coding system: green = Excel, blue = Word, orange-red = PowerPoint, making each application immediately identifiable.

Has the Excel logo always looked the same?

No โ€” the Excel logo has gone through at least five major design eras since the application launched in 1985. Early versions used simple flat icons typical of 1980s computing. The Office 97โ€“2003 era featured 3D, skeuomorphic icons with shading and depth. Office 2007โ€“2013 introduced the colour-coded document icons with an 'X' element. Office 2013โ€“2018 flattened the design significantly. The 2019 Fluent Design refresh โ€” current as of 2026 โ€” brought subtle dimensional effects back to an otherwise flat icon design. The consistent element across recent eras is the green colour and the 'X' identifier.

Where can I download the official Excel logo?

The official source for Microsoft product logos is Microsoft's brand resources and News Centre (news.microsoft.com) for press and editorial use. Microsoft Brand Central provides guidance and assets for partners and licensed organisations. For most professional uses โ€” presentations, training materials, documentation โ€” a high-resolution screenshot of the installed application icon is acceptable and straightforward. Avoid third-party 'free logo download' sites, as colour accuracy, resolution, and licensing terms are inconsistent and potentially problematic.

Can I use the Excel logo in my presentation or document?

For most internal business uses โ€” presentations, training materials, documentation โ€” limited use of the Excel logo to identify the application is generally acceptable under fair use principles. However, you should not use the logo in a way that implies Microsoft endorses your product or service, alter the logo's design or colours, or use it more prominently than your own branding in commercial materials. For editorial and press use, source images from Microsoft's News Centre. For commercial materials suggesting Microsoft partnership or endorsement, contact Microsoft's trademark team. When in doubt, describe Excel in text rather than using the logo.

What is the difference between the Excel logo and the Microsoft 365 logo?

The Excel logo (the green X square) identifies Microsoft Excel specifically โ€” the spreadsheet application. The Microsoft 365 logo identifies the broader subscription suite that includes Excel, Word, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, and other applications. The Microsoft 365 logo is a colourful circle design that incorporates elements representing the suite as a whole. When you see the green X, that refers specifically to Excel; when you see the Microsoft 365 branding, that refers to the subscription package. Both logos can appear in the same context โ€” for example, a business might say 'included in your Microsoft 365 subscription' alongside the Microsoft 365 logo, then show the Excel green X when discussing the specific spreadsheet application.
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