How to highlight cell or row with checkbox in Excel?
Resize or format a control on a worksheet - Format the colors and lines of a Form control check box or option button Select the control that you want to format. Right-click the selection, and then click Format Control. On the Colors and Lines tab, do one or more of the following. In Excel, a checkbox is an interactive tool that can be used to select or deselect an option. You must have seen it in many web form available online. You can use a checkbox in Excel to create interactive checklists, dynamic charts, and dashboards. This Excel tutorial covers the following topics.
As below screenshot shown, you need to highlight row or cell with checkbox. When a checkbox is checked, a specified row or a cell will be highlighted automatically. But how to achieve it in Excel? This article will show you two methods to achieve it.
Office Tab Enable Tabbed Editing and Browsing in Office, and Make Your Work Much Easier...
Kutools for Excel Solves Most of Your Problems, and Increases Your Productivity by80%
- Reuse Anything: Add the most used or complex formulas, charts and anything else to your favorites, and quickly reuse them in the future.
- More than 20 text features: Extract Number from Text String; Extract or Remove Part of Texts; Convert Numbers and Currencies to English Words...
- Merge Tools: Multiple Workbooks and Sheets into One; Merge Multiple Cells/Rows/Columns Without Losing Data; Merge Duplicate Rows and Sum...
- Split Tools: Split Data into Multiple Sheets Based on Value; One Workbook to Multiple Excel, PDF or CSV Files; One Column to Multiple Columns...
- Paste Skipping Hidden/Filtered Rows; Count And Sum by Background Color; Create Mailing List and Send Emails by Cell's Value...
- Super Filter: Create advanced filter schemes and apply to any sheets; Sort by week, day, frequency and more; Filter by bold, formulas, comment...
- More than300 powerful features; Works with Office2007-2019 and 365; Supports all languages; Easy deploying in your enterprise or organization.
Highlight cell or row with checkbox with Conditional Formatting
Amazing! Using Efficient Tabs in Excel Like Chrome, Firefox and Safari!
Save 50% of your time, and reduce thousands of mouse clicks for you every day!
You can create a Conditional Formatting rule to highlight cell or row with checkbox in Excel. Please do as follows.
Link all check box to a specified cell
1. You need to insert checkboxes into cells one by one manually by clicking Developer > Insert > Check Box(Form Control).
2. Now check boxes have been inserted to cells in column I. Please select the first check box in I1, enter formula =$J1 into the formula bar, and then press the Enter key.
Tip: If you don't want to have values associated in adjacent cells to checkboxes, you can link the checkbox to another worksheet's cell such as =Sheet3!$E1.
2. Repeat step 1 until all check boxes are linked to the adjacent cells or cells in another worksheet.
Note: All linked cells should be consecutive and locating in the same column.
Note: All linked cells should be consecutive and locating in the same column.
Create a Conditional Formatting rule
Now you need to create a Conditional Formatting rule as follows step by step.
1. Select the rows you need to highlight with checkboxes, then click Conditional Formatting > New Rule under the Home tab. See screenshot:
![Excel if checkbox is checked Excel if checkbox is checked](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125816853/924190231.png)
2. In the New Formatting Rule dialog box, you need to:
2.1 Select the Use a formula to determine which cells to format option in the Select a Rule Type box;
2.2 Enter formula =IF($J1=TRUE,TRUE,FALSE) into the Format values where this formula is true box;
Or =IF(Sheet3!$E1=TRUE,TRUE,FALSE) if the check boxes linked to another worksheet.
Or =IF(Sheet3!$E1=TRUE,TRUE,FALSE) if the check boxes linked to another worksheet.
2.3 Click the Format button to specify a highlighted color for the rows;
2.4 Click the OK button. See screenshot:
Note: In the formula, $J1 or $E1 is the first linked cell for the check boxes, and make sure the cell reference has been changed to column absolute (J1 > $J1 or E1 > $E1).
Now the Conditional Formatting rule is created. When checking the check boxes, the corresponding rows will be highlighted automatically as bellows screenshot shown.
Highlight cell or row with checkbox with VBA code
The following VBA code can also help you to highlight cell or row with checkbox in Excel. Please do as follows.
1. In the worksheet you need to highlight cell or row with checkbox. Right click the Sheet Tab and select View Code from the right-clicking menu to open the Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications window.
2. Then copy and paste the below VBA code into the Code window.
VBA code: Highlight row with checkbox in Excel
3. Press the F5 key to run the code. (Note: you should put the cursor into the first part of the code to apply the F5 key) In the popping up Kutools for Excel dialog box, please select the range you want to insert check boxes, and then click the OK button. Here I select range I1:I6. See screenshot:
4. Then check boxes are inserted into selected cells. Check any one of the checkboxes, the corresponding row will be highlighted automatically as below screenshot shown.
Tip: If you want to insert multiple check boxes into a selected range in bulk, you can try the Batch Insert Check Boxes utility pf Kutools for Excel. Or batch insert multiple Option Buttons with the Batch Insert Option Buttons utility. Besides, you can delete all check boxes at once with the Batch Delete Check Boxes utility as below screenshots shown. You can go to free download the software with no limitation in 60 days.
Related articles:
Kutools for Excel Solves Most of Your Problems, and Increases Your Productivity by80%
- Reuse: Quickly insert complex formulas, charts and anything that you have used before; Encrypt Cells with password; Create Mailing List and send emails...
- Super Formula Bar (easily edit multiple lines of text and formula); Reading Layout (easily read and edit large numbers of cells); Paste to Filtered Range...
- Merge Cells/Rows/Columns without losing Data; Split Cells Content; Combine Duplicate Rows/Columns... Prevent Duplicate Cells; Compare Ranges...
- Select Duplicate or Unique Rows; Select Blank Rows (all cells are empty); Super Find and Fuzzy Find in Many Workbooks; Random Select...
- Exact Copy Multiple Cells without changing formula reference; Auto Create References to Multiple Sheets; Insert Bullets, Check Boxes and more...
- Extract Text, Add Text, Remove by Position, Remove Space; Create and Print Paging Subtotals; Convert Between Cells Content and Comments...
- Super Filter (save and apply filter schemes to other sheets); Advanced Sort by month/week/day, frequency and more; Special Filter by bold, italic...
- Combine Workbooks and WorkSheets; Merge Tables based on key columns; Split Data into Multiple Sheets; Batch Convert xls, xlsx and PDF...
- More than300 powerful features. Supports Office/Excel2007-2019 and 365. Supports all languages. Easy deploying in your enterprise or organization. Full features30-day free trial.
Office Tab Brings Tabbed interface to Office, and Make Your Work Much Easier
- Enable tabbed editing and reading in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, Access, Visio and Project.
- Open and create multiple documents in new tabs of the same window, rather than in new windows.
- Increases your productivity by50%, and reduces hundreds of mouse clicks for you every day!
or post as a guest, but your post won't be published automatically.
Loading comment... The comment will be refreshed after 00:00.
- This is a horrendous article. It lacks a lot of information and steps. If you follow this article verbatim it will not end in the result you are seeking.
Essentially the article is saying to have 2 columns where the checkboxes are linked to adjacent columns to enter in values which are then used for conditional formats. No one wants to have values associated in adjacent cells to checkboxes. Lastly, if this is the route you're going you're not linking checkboxes to conditional formats, you are linking checkboxes to cell values which are then in turn associated to conditional formats.
It is easier to just use icons instead of checkboxes (use the green checkmark icon) and create the conditional formats for a value of 1 or 0. If cell = 1 then it will replace the value with the icon and highlight your row. To accomplish this you use 2 conditional formats on your table.
Top left of table is B4, bottom right of table is L28
1st conditional format:
USE A FORMULA TO DETERMINE WHICH CELLS TO FORMAT
Formula: =$B4=1
Format: fill
Applies to: =$B4:$L28
2nd conditional format:
FORMAT CELLS BASED ON THEIR VALUES
Icon Set Custom
SHOW ICON ONLY (check this box off)
First icon (green checkmark) when value is > = 1 (type: number)
Second icon (no icon) when value is > = -1 (type: number)
Third icon (no icon) when < -1
Now, when I enter a 1 in B4 or any of the B column cells, it will highlight the entire row for me and replace the '1' with a checkmark.
BUILT-IN TEMPLATE WITH THIS FORMATTING:
1) Open Excel, search for a new template. Enter 'Inventory' as the search term
2) Select the template titled 'Inventory list with highlighting'
3) Highlight the first row of the table, open conditional formats to manage/edit. You will see the 2nd and 3rd formats are for highlights and the icon in the B column. You can change the icon to whatever you want. Remove the first format if you don't want the strikeout options from the Discontinued column. - To post as a guest, your comment is unpublished.I have a question about the initial step of linking the checkbox to a true/false.
1. Select the first check box in I1, enter formula =$J$1 into the formula bar, and then press the Enter key.
2. Repeat step 1 until all check boxes are linked to the adjacent cells.
For the repeat, does it have to be done for each cell or can you get the drag down to autofill? Right now, when I drag down the corner box it will autofill with =$J$1 for everything so that if I check one box, every box is checked. How can I fix this without manually linking each checkbox?- Hi,
The Fill Handle can't help in this case. You need to manually link each checkbox to its adjacent cell.