Chart Generator

Choose a chart template, enter labels and values, and get an instant downloadable chart.

Each row has one label and one value. Add as many rows as needed.
Group Settings
Each row includes values for all groups with equal columns. Add as many rows as needed.
Gauge Settings
Example: current 72, max 180, unit km/h.
Heatmap Settings
Each row needs label, metric 1, and metric 2.

Chart Preview

  1. Select a chart template (bar, pie, line, heatmap, and more).
  2. Enter chart title and choose a color theme.
  3. Add labels and values in data rows. Click "Add Row" to add more data points.
  4. Chart updates live. Download as PNG or SVG when ready.

When would you use this?

  • When you need to turn a dataset into a chart quickly for reporting or presentation.
  • When you need visualized information for office reports, proposal decks, classroom materials, or social posts.
  • When you want to try different chart types first and see which one tells your data story best.

How should I choose a chart type?

Use bar charts for category comparison, pie charts for proportions, line charts for trends over time, and gauges for single progress-style indicators. Start with what you want to emphasize: comparison, share, or change.

Why do some templates need different input formats?

Different chart types need different data structures. Grouped charts need multiple series, gauges need a current and maximum value, and heatmaps need at least two metrics to express size and color intensity.

Should I download PNG or SVG?

PNG is convenient for slides, documents, and quick sharing. SVG is better if you need to scale, print, or hand the chart to a designer for further editing, because it is a vector format.

Why does the chart look crowded when I add a lot of data?

Charts have readability limits. Once there are too many labels or visual elements, they compete for space. That usually means the data should be simplified, split into multiple charts, or moved to a more suitable large-data view.

Is this tool suitable for formal reporting?

Yes for quick chart production, draft validation, and small to mid-sized reporting. For external or formal documents, you should still review the numbers, titles, units, color consistency, and layout integration.

No articles yet

No related articles are available yet. Please check back soon.

You Might Also Need