A slicer in Excel is a visual filtering tool that lets you filter pivot tables, pivot charts, and regular Excel tables by clicking on-screen buttons. Microsoft introduced slicers in Excel 2010 for pivot tables, then expanded slicer use in Excel 2013 to cover regular Tables as well. If you've ever built a pivot table report and wanted a faster, more visual way to cut the data, slicers are exactly what you're looking for.
Think of it this way: instead of digging through dropdown arrows and checkboxes buried in the filter menu, you get a floating panel of clickable buttons right on your worksheet. Click "North" and your pivot table instantly shows only North region data. Click it again to deselect. It's fast, it's visual, and โ once you've used it โ you'll wonder how you managed without it.
Slicers don't just help you. They help everyone who opens your file. When you share a workbook with colleagues, they don't need to know anything about Excel pivot tables or filter menus. They just click the buttons they want. No instructions required. That interactivity is why slicers have become the go-to tool for reporting and data analysis in Excel dashboards that executives and non-technical users actually engage with.
Here's where slicers work:
One thing to note: slicers don't work on plain cell ranges. Your data needs to be in either a pivot table or a formatted Excel Table before you can insert a slicer. If your data is just sitting in a plain range, format it as a Table first (Ctrl+T), then add your slicer.
When you insert a slicer for a field like "Region," you'll see one button for every unique region value in your dataset โ North, South, East, West, or whatever your data contains. If new values appear later (after a data refresh), the slicer adds the new buttons automatically. You never have to update it manually. That makes slicers especially practical for workbooks connected to live or regularly updated data sources.
Slicers also keep your workbook honest. When a colleague opens your dashboard and sees a button labeled "Q3" highlighted, they immediately know the data is filtered to Q3 โ no guessing, no hunting for hidden filter indicators. That transparency is one of the biggest practical advantages slicers have over traditional dropdown filters. Everyone sees the same filtered state at a glance.
Both slicers and regular filters narrow down your data โ but they work quite differently in practice, and knowing when to use each saves you a lot of back-and-forth.
Regular filters use dropdown arrows in the column headers. You click the arrow, scroll through checkboxes, pick your values, and click OK. The filtered state isn't obvious just by looking at the spreadsheet โ you have to notice the tiny funnel icon on the column header to know filtering is active at all. For simple one-off filtering while you're working, that's fine. For interactive dashboards, not so much.
Slicers display every available filter option as a button on the sheet. Selected items are highlighted; unselected ones are grayed out. You can see exactly what's filtered and what isn't, at a glance. That visibility matters when multiple people are working with the same dashboard, or when you're presenting data and need the audience to follow what's happening on screen.
The other big difference: one slicer can connect to multiple pivot tables at once. Change the filter in one slicer and every connected pivot table updates simultaneously โ something you simply can't do with standard column filters. If you're building a multi-table executive dashboard, slicers are the clear choice.
That said, regular filters have their place. They're built into the column header with no extra setup. For quick, one-off filtering of data you're actively editing โ not presenting โ a standard AutoFilter often gets the job done faster. Use slicers when the workbook is meant to be interacted with by others, or when you need the filtered state to be visible and obvious at all times. A quick rule of thumb: if you're building a report others will click through, use slicers. If you're personally filtering data for a one-time lookup, AutoFilter is faster.
With those basics in place, you're ready to insert slicers that work exactly as expected. The steps below cover all three insertion methods โ pivot tables, regular Excel Tables, and the special Timeline slicer for date fields โ so you can pick whichever one applies to your workbook. Each method takes well under a minute once you know where to click.
Once you've inserted a slicer, using it is straightforward โ but a few interaction tricks are worth knowing upfront.
Click any button in the slicer to filter your pivot table to just that value. The selected button turns blue by default and everything else grays out. Your data updates instantly โ no OK button needed, no Enter key required. It just responds immediately.
You'll often need to select more than one value at a time. Say you want to see data for both the North and East regions together. There are two ways to handle that:
Click the red X (Clear Filter) button in the top-right corner of the slicer to show everything again. You can also press Alt+C while the slicer is selected. All filters are instantly removed and your full data comes back.
This is where slicers go from useful to genuinely powerful. If your workbook has two or more pivot tables built from the same data source, you can connect a single slicer to all of them at once:
Now when you click a slicer button, every connected pivot table filters simultaneously. This is the backbone of any multi-pivot dashboard. If you add a new pivot table later and it doesn't respond to the slicer, revisit Report Connections โ the new table won't be checked by default and you'll need to add it manually.
One important limitation: Report Connections only shows pivot tables built from the same data cache. If two pivot tables were created from different source data, they can't share a slicer. You'd need separate slicers for each source.
Slicers float above the worksheet โ they're not inside cells. Drag the border to move them anywhere on the sheet. Drag corner handles to resize. For precise control, the Slicer contextual tab on the ribbon has a Size group where you can enter exact height and width values.
When building a dashboard with multiple slicers, keeping them visually aligned makes a real difference. Use the Arrange tools (Align Left, Distribute Vertically) under the Slicer tab to line everything up neatly. Same principle applies to text formatting โ knowing how to indent in Excel for consistent cell alignment pairs well with precise slicer positioning for a clean, professional final layout.
If you don't want users accidentally dragging slicers around the sheet, right-click the slicer โ Size and Properties โ Properties tab โ check "Don't move or size with cells." This locks the slicer's position relative to the sheet, not specific cells, so it stays put even when people scroll or resize columns nearby.
Click the multi-select icon (two squares) to toggle multiple buttons without holding Ctrl. Great for touchscreens and presentations.
Right-click any slicer โ Report Connections to link it to multiple pivot tables built from the same data source.
Under the Slicer tab, the Slicer Styles gallery offers dozens of pre-built color themes. Duplicate any style to create a custom version.
A specialized slicer for date fields with a horizontal date bar. Filter by Days, Months, Quarters, or Years.
By default, slicer buttons stack in one column. Increase the Columns count to display them side by side in a grid.
Out of the box, slicers are functional but generic โ they work, but they probably won't match your workbook's color scheme. The formatting options are extensive, and you don't need to be a designer to get clean results.
Click the slicer to select it. A Slicer contextual tab appears on the ribbon โ it's only visible when a slicer is selected, so don't go hunting for it otherwise. In the Slicer Styles group, you'll see a gallery of color themes: light, medium, and dark variants. Hover over any style for a live preview. Click to apply.
If none of the built-in styles match your needs, right-click any style in the gallery and choose Duplicate. This opens the Modify Slicer Style dialog, where you can configure font, border color, selected button color, unselected button color, and header background. Once saved, your custom style shows up in the gallery for reuse across the whole workbook. If you're creating multiple dashboards that should look consistent, setting up a branded slicer style once and reusing it is much faster than manually formatting each slicer from scratch.
In the Buttons group on the Slicer tab, you'll find Height and Width fields for individual button size. By default, buttons stack in a single column. If your slicer shows 20 product names, that becomes a very tall panel โ not ideal for a compact dashboard where screen space is limited.
Reduce button height and increase the Columns count from 1 to 3 or 4. Your 20 buttons now display as a 4-column grid: much more manageable. This space-saving approach is similar to how how to change column width in Excel helps fit more data into the same screen without losing readability.
Every slicer has a header at the top showing the field name. You can't rename it directly from the slicer itself, but you can change the display name by renaming the pivot table field in the PivotTable Fields pane. Alternatively, hide the header completely: right-click the slicer โ Slicer Settings โ uncheck Display header. Useful when the slicer's position on the dashboard already makes its purpose clear.
The Slicer Settings dialog also controls how empty items display. By default, Excel shows grayed-out buttons for values that don't exist in the current data combination. You can choose to hide those items entirely, or push them to the bottom of the list. For dashboards with lots of cross-filtering, hiding empty items keeps the interface from looking cluttered and makes the active filter options easier to find at a glance.
Even experienced Excel users run into slicer issues. Here are the ones that come up most often โ and exactly how to resolve them.
You right-click the slicer, choose Report Connections, and some of your pivot tables aren't listed. This almost always means those pivot tables were created from a different data source or assigned to a different data cache. Slicers can only connect pivot tables that share the same cache. The fix: delete the disconnected pivot table and recreate it from the same source table as the others. Excel will then assign it the same cache, and it'll appear in Report Connections automatically.
Refreshing a pivot table โ especially one connected to an external data source โ can sometimes reset its Report Connections. After any structural change or full data refresh, right-click your slicer and check Report Connections to confirm all pivot tables are still ticked. It only takes a second and saves you from wondering why your slicer suddenly stopped working.
These aren't broken. Grayed-out buttons represent values that don't appear in the current filtered combination. Excel displays them to show you that those values exist in the dataset โ just not given your current other filters. Think of them as an "FYI" from Excel. If you find them distracting, right-click the slicer โ Slicer Settings โ enable Hide items with no data. They'll disappear until there's matching data again.
If you're on Excel 2010, slicers only support pivot tables. Table slicers arrived in Excel 2013. If you're on a newer version and it's still not working, double-check that your data is actually formatted as an Excel Table (with the blue banded row formatting) rather than just being a plain range.
This happens when the slicer's "Move and size with cells" property is enabled. Right-click โ Size and Properties โ Properties โ switch to "Don't move or size with cells." The slicer will then stay anchored to a fixed position on the sheet regardless of what happens to the cells underneath it.
For a broader reference to Excel shortcuts and workflows, the Excel cheat sheet is worth bookmarking โ it covers the kind of quick tips that pair well with slicer-based dashboards.