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Learning how to remove strikethrough in Excel is one of those small but essential skills that saves hours when you inherit messy spreadsheets, clean up shared project trackers, or prepare a workbook for export. Strikethrough formatting—those horizontal lines drawn through cell text—is often applied to mark completed tasks, deprecated SKUs, or canceled orders, but it tends to linger long after its purpose ends. The good news is you have multiple removal paths, from a single keyboard shortcut to powerful VBA macros that strip it from entire workbooks in seconds.

This guide walks through every reliable method, including the universal Ctrl+5 shortcut, the Format Cells dialog, conditional formatting cleanup, Find & Replace tricks, and macro automation. We will also cover edge cases like strikethrough applied to only part of a cell's text, strikethrough hidden inside conditional formatting rules, and the situation where strikethrough refuses to disappear because it is locked behind a protected sheet. Each section gives you a concrete step-by-step you can follow on Windows, Mac, and Excel for the web.

If you frequently work with formulas alongside formatting, you may already be comfortable with functions like excellent bath towels and other statistical references—but formatting cleanup follows a different mental model than formulas, so we will keep the language plain and the screenshots descriptive. By the end of this article, you will be able to remove strikethrough from a single cell, a range, an entire sheet, or every worksheet in a workbook with full confidence.

Beyond pure removal, we will also cover prevention. Many users do not realize that strikethrough often reappears because a conditional formatting rule is silently re-applying it whenever a value in a status column changes to "Done" or "Cancelled". If you remove the formatting manually without addressing the underlying rule, it will return the next time the workbook recalculates. Identifying and disabling those rules is a critical step in keeping spreadsheets clean for the long term.

Strikethrough behaves slightly differently in Excel 365, Excel 2021, Excel 2019, and Excel for the Web. The Ctrl+5 shortcut works everywhere on Windows, while Mac users press Cmd+Shift+X. Excel Online supports strikethrough through the Home ribbon but hides some advanced format dialogs. We will flag these platform differences as they appear so you never get stuck wondering why a shortcut from a tutorial does not work on your machine.

Finally, we will compare strikethrough removal against related cleanup tasks like clearing all formatting, resetting cell styles, and stripping conditional formatting in bulk. Those nuclear options are sometimes the fastest path, but they also wipe colors, borders, and number formats you might want to keep. Knowing when to use a scalpel versus a sledgehammer is the difference between a five-second fix and an hour of rebuilding lost formatting.

Whether you are a project manager auditing a task tracker, an analyst preparing data for a stakeholder review, or a student cleaning up a budget template, this guide gives you the exact keystrokes and clicks you need. Bookmark it, share it with colleagues who ask the same question every quarter, and use it as a checklist whenever a strikethrough cell appears where it does not belong.

Strikethrough in Excel by the Numbers

⌨️
Ctrl+5
Universal Shortcut
⏱️
<3 sec
Avg Removal Time
📊
7
Removal Methods
🔄
5
Excel Versions
⚠️
42%
Rule-Driven Cases
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Keyboard Shortcuts and Quick Methods

🎯

Click the cell, drag to select a range, or press Ctrl+A to select the entire sheet. For non-adjacent cells, hold Ctrl while clicking each cell. The selection must be active before any shortcut will toggle strikethrough off.

⌨️

Ctrl+5 toggles strikethrough on and off. If the cells currently show strikethrough, one press removes it instantly. The shortcut works in every Windows version of Excel from 2007 forward, including Excel 365 and standalone 2021 installations.

🍎

On macOS, the strikethrough shortcut is Command+Shift+X rather than Ctrl+5. Some older Mac builds also accept Cmd+Shift+H, but Cmd+Shift+X is the modern standard across Microsoft 365 for Mac and Excel 2021.

📋

If shortcuts fail, click Home, then open the Font dialog launcher (the tiny arrow in the bottom-right corner of the Font group). Uncheck the Strikethrough box and click OK. This works identically on Windows, Mac, and Excel for the web.

🧹

For nuclear cleanup, select the range and choose Home → Editing → Clear → Clear Formats. This removes strikethrough along with all other formatting—use carefully because it also wipes colors, borders, font sizes, and number formats applied to those cells.

Click any affected cell and look at the Home ribbon's Strikethrough button (the abc with a line through it). It should appear un-pressed. Also check the formula bar text to confirm visually that the strike line is gone.

The Format Cells dialog is the most reliable way to remove strikethrough when shortcuts fail or when you need surgical control over multiple font attributes at once. Open it by selecting your range and pressing Ctrl+1 on Windows or Cmd+1 on Mac. The dialog opens to the last-used tab, so click the Font tab. Under the Effects section near the bottom, you will see three checkboxes: Strikethrough, Superscript, and Subscript. Uncheck Strikethrough and click OK. The change applies to every selected cell simultaneously, even if some cells had strikethrough and others did not.

This method is especially useful when strikethrough applies to only part of a cell's text rather than the whole cell. To target partial strikethrough, double-click the cell to enter edit mode, highlight the specific characters that need fixing, then press Ctrl+1 and uncheck Strikethrough. This is the only way to remove strikethrough from individual letters or words without affecting the rest of the cell. It is also the workflow you need when cleaning up text imported from Word documents where strikethrough was applied to specific phrases.

If you are working with a large workbook and want to remove strikethrough from every cell on a sheet, click the gray triangle in the top-left corner where the row and column headers meet—this selects every cell. Then press Ctrl+5 once. If strikethrough was present anywhere, this single keystroke may inadvertently apply it to cells that did not have it before, because Ctrl+5 is a toggle. The safer approach is to open Format Cells, uncheck Strikethrough explicitly, and click OK. That sets the property to false everywhere rather than flipping it.

For workbooks where strikethrough is mixed with other formatting issues, consider clearing only the font effects using a custom approach. Copy a cell that has clean formatting, select the target range, right-click and choose Paste Special → Formats. This overwrites strikethrough along with all other formatting in the destination cells. It is fast but indiscriminate, so use it only when you want to standardize the entire range's appearance to match a known-good template cell.

Excel for the web has a slightly simpler interface. You will find the Strikethrough button directly on the Home ribbon, in the Font group, next to Bold and Italic. Click it once to toggle strikethrough off for the selected cells. The web version does not expose the full Format Cells dialog, so partial-text strikethrough removal requires switching to the desktop app. If you collaborate with team members who use only Excel Online, build your workflows around full-cell formatting to avoid hidden issues.

Some advanced users prefer to use the Name Box and Go To Special features together to find every cell containing strikethrough before removing it. Unfortunately, Excel's built-in Find & Replace does not directly search by font effects, but you can use the Format button inside Find & Replace, choose the Font tab, check Strikethrough, and then Find All.

Excel will list every match. Select them all in the results pane, close the dialog, and apply Ctrl+5 to clear the formatting in one action. If you ever filter on these results, the techniques behind colleges of excellence can speed up navigation across long sheets.

Remember that strikethrough on numbers does not change the underlying value used in calculations. A cell that displays $1,200 with strikethrough still contributes $1,200 to SUM, AVERAGE, or any other formula referencing it. If you want to exclude struck-through items from a calculation, you need a helper column and a status flag—formatting alone does not affect math. Many teams misunderstand this and assume that crossing out a row removes it from totals, which leads to subtle reporting errors.

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Platform Differences for VLOOKUP Excel Users and Formatters

📋 Windows

On Windows, Ctrl+5 is the canonical strikethrough toggle and has worked since Excel 2007. Ctrl+1 opens Format Cells, where you can manage strikethrough alongside font color, size, and effects. The full ribbon exposes the Font dialog launcher in the bottom-right of the Font group, which gives one-click access to all font attributes.

Windows users also get the full VBA editor (Alt+F11), enabling macro-based bulk removal across entire workbooks. Power Query and conditional formatting rule management are also more complete on Windows than on Mac or web, so this is the platform of choice for serious cleanup work or auditing inherited templates from former colleagues.

📋 macOS

On Mac, the strikethrough shortcut is Cmd+Shift+X. Cmd+1 opens Format Cells, which functions almost identically to the Windows version but uses native macOS dialog styling. Some keyboard configurations may intercept Cmd+5 for other system actions, so stick with Cmd+Shift+X for reliability across MacBook and external keyboards alike.

VBA is available on Mac through Tools → Macro → Visual Basic Editor, though some Windows-specific objects do not exist. Most font formatting macros, including those that loop through cells and set Font.Strikethrough = False, work identically across both platforms with no code changes required for basic cleanup tasks.

📋 Excel for the Web

Excel for the web offers strikethrough directly on the Home ribbon as a dedicated button between Underline and Borders. Click it to toggle strikethrough on or off for the selected range. The Ctrl+5 shortcut also works in the web version on supported browsers, though some keyboard layouts on Chromebooks may require Ctrl+Shift+5 instead.

The web version lacks the full Format Cells dialog, so partial-text strikethrough removal is not possible online—you must open the workbook in desktop Excel for that. VBA is also unavailable on the web, but conditional formatting rules created on desktop will continue to function and apply strikethrough automatically in the browser view.

Manual Removal vs. VBA Macros: Which Approach Wins?

Pros

  • Manual Ctrl+5 is instant for small ranges and requires zero setup
  • Format Cells dialog gives precise control over partial-text strikethrough
  • No risk of breaking other formatting like colors, borders, or number formats
  • Works identically on Windows, Mac, and Excel Online for full-cell removal
  • No need to enable macros or adjust trust center settings to use shortcuts
  • Easy to teach to non-technical colleagues in under 30 seconds

Cons

  • Manual cleanup does not scale across 50+ sheets or multi-workbook tasks
  • Misses strikethrough generated by conditional formatting rules silently
  • Ctrl+5 toggles, so accidental presses can add strikethrough to clean cells
  • Partial-text strikethrough requires desktop Excel and cannot be done on web
  • No audit trail or undo log beyond Excel's standard 100-step history
  • Repeated manual cleanups waste hours when the root cause is a CF rule
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Complete Checklist to Remove Strikethrough in Excel

Select the affected cells, range, or entire sheet using Ctrl+A if needed
Press Ctrl+5 on Windows or Cmd+Shift+X on Mac as the first attempt
If strikethrough persists, open Format Cells with Ctrl+1 and uncheck the Strikethrough box
Check Home → Conditional Formatting → Manage Rules for any rule applying strikethrough
Edit or delete conditional formatting rules referencing status columns like Done or Cancelled
Use Home → Clear → Clear Formats as a last resort knowing it wipes all formatting
For partial-text strikethrough, double-click the cell, highlight characters, and press Ctrl+1
Run a VBA macro to loop through sheets when removing strikethrough across an entire workbook
Verify with Find &amp; Replace + Format → Font → Strikethrough to confirm zero remaining matches
Save the workbook and re-test by changing status values to confirm strikethrough does not reappear
Always check conditional formatting first

If strikethrough keeps coming back after you remove it, the culprit is almost always a conditional formatting rule tied to a status column. Open Home → Conditional Formatting → Manage Rules and inspect every rule before manually clearing formats. Fixing the rule once is faster than removing strikethrough fifty times.

Conditional formatting is the single biggest reason strikethrough refuses to disappear in Excel. A rule that says "If column F equals Done, then apply strikethrough to row" will silently reapply the formatting every time someone updates a status cell. You can press Ctrl+5 a hundred times and the strikethrough will return on the next recalculation. To find these rules, navigate to Home → Conditional Formatting → Manage Rules, then change the dropdown from "Current Selection" to "This Worksheet" or "This Workbook" so you see every rule, not just rules attached to the active range.

Look through the list for any rule whose preview shows the strikethrough effect. Click the rule, then click Edit Rule to inspect the formula or condition. Common patterns include =$F2="Done", =$F2="Cancelled", =ISNUMBER($G2), or =$H2<TODAY(). If you find the rule that drives unwanted strikethrough, you have three choices: delete it entirely, edit the formula to be more selective, or change the formatting style to remove the strikethrough effect while keeping color or other indicators in place.

Deleting a rule is permanent within the workbook but reversible if you save a backup before making changes. Always duplicate the workbook before mass-deleting conditional formatting rules, because some rules combine strikethrough with valuable color coding that you may not want to lose. The safer path is editing the rule: click Edit Rule, click Format, switch to the Font tab, and uncheck Strikethrough. The rule still fires on the same condition but no longer applies the strike effect, leaving the rest of the formatting intact.

Another sneaky source of strikethrough is cell styles. If your workbook uses a custom style that includes strikethrough as part of its definition, every cell with that style will display the effect. Check Home → Cell Styles, right-click each custom style, and choose Modify to see the underlying format. Remove strikethrough from any style definition that includes it, then click OK. The change propagates to every cell using that style across the entire workbook instantly without requiring further manual edits.

Tables and named ranges can also carry formatting that includes strikethrough as a default style. If you converted a range to a table using Ctrl+T and chose a table style with strikethrough banding, every new row inherits the effect. Click anywhere in the table, go to Table Design, and choose a different style or click the Clear button at the bottom of the style gallery. This resets table formatting without affecting the data or formulas inside the table.

For complex workbooks with strikethrough scattered across many sheets, use the Inquire add-in (available in Excel 365 and Excel 2019 Professional) to audit formatting. Inquire's Workbook Analysis tool lists every cell with non-default formatting and can help you spot strikethrough patterns you would otherwise miss. If Inquire is not enabled, go to File → Options → Add-ins → COM Add-ins → Go, and check Inquire. Restart Excel to see the new Inquire tab on the ribbon with full audit tools available.

Finally, remember that paste operations can reintroduce strikethrough from external sources. When copying from another workbook, Word, or a web page, use Paste Special → Values rather than a standard paste to avoid importing unwanted formatting. This is particularly important when pulling data from email attachments or shared drives where the source document's formatting standards may differ from yours. Building this habit eliminates ninety percent of strikethrough surprises in collaborative workbooks across multiple departments or vendors.

VBA macros are the fastest way to remove strikethrough across large workbooks, especially when you inherit a tracker with dozens of sheets. Open the VBA editor with Alt+F11, insert a new module via Insert → Module, and paste a simple loop. A basic macro reads: Sub RemoveStrikethrough() Dim ws As Worksheet: For Each ws In ThisWorkbook.Worksheets: ws.Cells.Font.Strikethrough = False: Next ws: End Sub. Run it with F5 and every cell on every sheet loses its strikethrough property in seconds, regardless of how many cells or sheets the workbook contains.

For more targeted removal, modify the macro to work only on the active sheet: ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Font.Strikethrough = False. This avoids touching sheets that might intentionally use strikethrough for design purposes. You can also add a confirmation dialog using MsgBox so the macro asks before running, which prevents accidental cleanup when a colleague shares a workbook with you. Save the macro in your Personal Macro Workbook so it is available across every Excel session and every workbook you open going forward.

If you need to remove strikethrough only from cells matching a condition, use a For Each loop with an If statement: For Each cell In ActiveSheet.UsedRange: If cell.Value = "Active" Then cell.Font.Strikethrough = False: Next cell. This is useful when some struck-through cells should remain that way (archived items) while others should be reset (mistakenly marked items). Combine the macro with input boxes to make it interactive, letting users specify which conditions to clean without editing code directly each time.

For workbooks with conditional formatting that applies strikethrough, VBA can also clear those rules. The line ActiveSheet.Cells.FormatConditions.Delete removes every conditional formatting rule on the active sheet, but use it carefully because it deletes color coding too. A more surgical approach loops through FormatConditions and inspects each rule's Font.Strikethrough property, deleting only rules that match. This requires more code but preserves color-only rules that you may want to keep for visual organization across status columns.

Macros can also produce reports of every cell with strikethrough before removing them, giving you an audit trail. Loop through UsedRange and write each strikethrough cell's address to a new sheet called "Audit". This is invaluable for compliance work or when explaining changes to stakeholders who need to know what was modified. Add a timestamp using Now() and the user's name from Environ("username") so the audit log captures who ran the cleanup and when. If you also need to confirm uniqueness in your data, techniques like bill and ted's excellent adventure cast pair well with audit macros.

If you do not want to write VBA, Office Scripts (available in Excel 365 on the web) provide a similar capability using TypeScript. A short script reads: function main(workbook: ExcelScript.Workbook) { workbook.getWorksheets().forEach(ws => ws.getUsedRange()?.getFormat().getFont().setStrikethrough(false)); }. Save the script in your Office Scripts library and run it across any workbook with one click. Office Scripts also integrate with Power Automate, letting you trigger strikethrough cleanup as part of an automated workflow when files arrive in a SharePoint folder.

For users who prefer no-code automation, Power Query can reshape data and discard formatting entirely. When you import a table through Power Query and load it back into Excel as a new table, all original formatting—including strikethrough—is stripped. The resulting table inherits only the styles you apply in the Query Editor or in the destination workbook. This is a clean-slate approach that works well when you want to start fresh with consistent formatting across a frequently imported dataset from external sources like CRM exports.

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Beyond the mechanics of removal, building good formatting habits prevents strikethrough problems from recurring. Establish a team convention that strikethrough means archived rather than completed—archived implies the row should be moved to a separate sheet within thirty days, while completed implies it stays in place with color coding only. This single rule eliminates ninety percent of strikethrough drift in shared workbooks because everyone knows that strikethrough is a temporary state preceding archival, not a permanent annotation that lives forever in the active sheet.

Document your formatting standards in a hidden "README" sheet inside every workbook template your team uses. Include screenshots of acceptable formatting, list every conditional formatting rule with its purpose, and provide a one-line VBA macro that resets the workbook to clean state. New team members can review the README on day one, and existing members can rerun the reset macro whenever drift accumulates. Templates that document themselves require less maintenance and produce fewer surprised users six months down the road when ownership changes hands.

When inheriting a workbook with heavy strikethrough usage, audit before you clean. Make a copy of the workbook, then use Find & Replace with Format → Font → Strikethrough checked to count every affected cell. Save that count, run your cleanup, and compare against the original to confirm you removed exactly what you intended. This audit trail protects you when someone asks why a specific cell no longer shows strikethrough—you have the original count and the rules that applied it documented for review with full timestamps.

Train colleagues to use status columns and filtering rather than strikethrough whenever possible. A status column with values like Open, In Progress, Done, and Cancelled, combined with Excel's filter functionality, gives the same visual organization as strikethrough without the formatting baggage. Filters can hide Done rows entirely so the active sheet shows only work in progress, and pivot tables can summarize counts by status. This is a more scalable approach for any workbook that will grow beyond a few hundred rows over time.

Consider using cell comments or threaded comments to record context instead of strikethrough. A comment that reads "Cancelled by client on 2026-03-15, see ticket #4521" preserves the rationale in a way that strikethrough cannot. Comments are searchable through Review → Show Comments, and they survive paste operations that would otherwise strip strikethrough formatting. They also do not interfere with calculations, conditional formatting, or sorting, so they integrate cleanly with the rest of your workbook ecosystem.

If your team uses Microsoft Teams or SharePoint for collaboration, link workbook changes to a changelog stored alongside the file. Every time someone removes strikethrough from a row, log the cell address, the previous value, and a one-line reason. This is overkill for casual spreadsheets but essential for financial models, compliance trackers, and any workbook subject to audit. The discipline of logging changes often reveals patterns—certain users always apply strikethrough incorrectly, suggesting a training opportunity for the whole department.

Finally, keep your Excel installation current. Microsoft 365 receives monthly updates that occasionally introduce small improvements to formatting behavior, conditional formatting performance, and VBA reliability. Running an outdated version means missing fixes that could prevent strikethrough-related bugs from biting you. Open File → Account → Update Options → Update Now to confirm you are on the latest channel. For organizations on the Semi-Annual Enterprise Channel, coordinate with IT to schedule updates that include the latest formatting improvements without disrupting active projects.

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Excel Questions and Answers

What is the keyboard shortcut to remove strikethrough in Excel?

On Windows, press Ctrl+5 to toggle strikethrough on or off for the selected cell or range. On Mac, use Cmd+Shift+X. The shortcut works in Excel 2007 through 365, including Excel for the web in most browsers. If the shortcut has no effect, the strikethrough is likely applied by a conditional formatting rule that must be edited or deleted from the Manage Rules dialog separately.

Why does strikethrough keep coming back after I remove it?

Persistent strikethrough is almost always caused by a conditional formatting rule tied to a status column. Open Home → Conditional Formatting → Manage Rules, switch the dropdown to This Workbook, and inspect every rule. Edit or delete any rule whose preview shows strikethrough. Manual removal alone will not fix this because the rule reapplies the formatting every time Excel recalculates the workbook or a referenced cell changes value.

How do I remove strikethrough from only part of a cell's text?

Double-click the cell to enter edit mode, then highlight the specific characters you want to fix. Press Ctrl+1 to open the Format Cells dialog, click the Font tab, and uncheck Strikethrough under Effects. Click OK and press Enter to commit. This partial-text formatting is only available in desktop Excel—Excel for the web cannot edit character-level formatting and requires switching to the desktop application.

Does Ctrl+5 work in Excel for the web?

Yes, Ctrl+5 toggles strikethrough in Excel for the web on most browsers, but some keyboard layouts on Chromebooks or Linux machines may intercept the key combination. As a reliable alternative, click the Strikethrough button on the Home ribbon directly. It sits next to Bold, Italic, and Underline in the Font group and provides the same toggle behavior with a single click on any platform.

How do I remove strikethrough from an entire workbook at once?

Use a short VBA macro. Press Alt+F11, insert a new module, and paste: Sub Clear() Dim ws As Worksheet: For Each ws In ThisWorkbook.Worksheets: ws.Cells.Font.Strikethrough = False: Next ws: End Sub. Press F5 to run. Every cell on every sheet loses its strikethrough property instantly. Save the macro to your Personal Macro Workbook to make it available across every workbook you open in the future.

Does strikethrough affect the values used in formulas?

No. Strikethrough is purely visual formatting and does not change the underlying cell value. A cell displaying $500 with strikethrough still contributes $500 to SUM, AVERAGE, and every other formula referencing it. To exclude struck-through items from a calculation you need a separate status column or helper flag combined with SUMIF, AVERAGEIF, or similar conditional aggregation functions to filter values based on that flag instead.

Can I find every cell with strikethrough in a workbook?

Yes, using Find & Replace. Press Ctrl+H, click Options, click the Format button next to Find What, switch to the Font tab, and check Strikethrough. Click Find All to list every match across the active sheet. To search the whole workbook, change the Within dropdown to Workbook. The results pane shows cell addresses you can click to navigate, then select all results and apply Ctrl+5 to clear formatting.

What if Clear Formats is the only thing that removes strikethrough?

Clear Formats works when strikethrough was applied as part of a custom cell style or theme that the standard shortcuts cannot override. However, Clear Formats also removes fill colors, borders, font sizes, and number formats. Before using it, copy the range to a backup sheet so you can rebuild any formatting you want to preserve. For financial workbooks, always preserve number formats by reapplying them after the Clear Formats operation completes.

How do I prevent strikethrough from spreading in shared workbooks?

Establish a team convention that strikethrough means archived, not complete. Replace ad-hoc strikethrough with a status column containing values like Open, Done, or Cancelled, then use Excel filters to hide completed rows. Document your standards in a hidden README sheet inside each template. Train colleagues to use comments or threaded comments for context rather than strikethrough, since comments survive paste operations and do not affect calculations.

Why does Ctrl+5 sometimes apply strikethrough instead of removing it?

Ctrl+5 is a toggle, so if any selected cell lacks strikethrough, pressing the shortcut applies it to the entire selection rather than removing it from the cells that already had it. To guarantee removal, open Format Cells with Ctrl+1 and uncheck Strikethrough explicitly. This sets the property to false everywhere regardless of the previous state, eliminating the unintended toggle behavior that catches many users off guard when selecting mixed ranges.
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