Overview
After building and reviewing thousands of Excel files over the years, I’ve seen some great stuff. But I’ve also seen plenty of files that make me slap my forehead. The difference is really just a combination of thoughtfulness and effort. Don’t worry about making them perfect, just get a little better over time. I started using an Excel QA checklist, and it made a huge difference.
In this article, we’ll look at 10 things that every Excel file should have – a combination of tools and approaches that will make your files efficient, professional, and super-useful. Don’t just keep these to yourself, share them with your friends and colleagues to help them out too! Make sure to grab a copy of the example workbook that accompanies this article using the box below! Looking for more Excel tools to leverage in your Excel files? Check out this guide to the Top 50 Excel Features and use it as a checklist to test your skills and evaluate your files!
The items
1. A table of contents
Even if you just have a handful of sheets in your file, a table of contents can be a huge help. It communicates to users what’s in the file, and when you include hyperlinks, it helps them navigate. I once worked with an Excel financial planning model that contained over 500 sheets…adding a table contents was the only way to use it!
There are two tools I’ve used over the years to add a hyperlinked table of contents in one step – one adds a simple list of the sheets in the file, while another one adds thumbnails of the sheets. Check them out here and the output in the screenshot below.

2. Instructions and assumptions
Instructions are absolutely crucial for every user of your Excel files, perhaps most importantly your future self! A good instructions sheet shows you care about quality. It should include comprehensive steps about how your file works and what actions should be taken to use it and update it.
You might also include any assumptions, drivers, or inputs on the instructions sheet. If there are many of them, it often makes sense to separate those into their own sheet. Additionally, include documentation throughout your file to memorialize your thinking and logic. Cell notes work great for this. To centralize all of the actions you can take with cell notes (formerly called cell comments), I use a tool called the Comment Picker (check it out here). See an example of a good instructions sheet below.

3. Minimal data points
- Collapse prior period/budget amounts and just show the variances to them.
- Display roll-ups instead of every account, location, department, etc.
- Include an Executive Summary near the beginning that focuses on the most important data points (with links to more details when desired).

4. Thoughtful formatting
- Round numbers to an appropriate number of digits
- Limit currency symbols to the top and bottom amounts in a column
- When displaying comparison/variance amounts, color them green for positive/good and red for negative/bad
- Include row banding (alternating fill colors) to make them easier to read across

5. Minimal inputs
Ideally, your Excel files should require minimal data entry, unless you’re using them as a light database. Yet too many people copy and paste data all over the place. This is time-consuming and risky – it’s so easy to forget to update something or accidentally miskey an item.
Minimize your inputs to items like dates, names, identifiers, etc. and link formulas to them. Centralize all your inputs so they are in one place. Use tools like Power Query to automatically pull in updated data you can link formulas or PivotTables to. And whatever you do, don’t mix formulas and hard-coded amounts – it’s a recipe for disaster!
See the screenshot below for an example of an inputs sheet. To ensure you don’t have hard-coded amounts throughout your sheets, check out the Conditional Formatting Picker that has options to highlight hard-coded amounts or formulas with hard-coded components.

6. Data validation
While it’s helpful to minimize data inputs, you usually can’t eliminate them completely. When you do need to capture data, use data validation to ensure it’s entered correctly. Between number ranges, date ranges, drop-down lists, or even custom definitions, Excel’s data validation is quite robust. It’s not bulletproof, but it’s much better to use it than not to. Identify and eliminate errors as early as you can in the process.
The other benefit is that you can guide your users with input instructions. I find that drop-down lists are great for speeding up data entry as well. See an example of this in the screenshot below. Check out the Data Validation Picker, which streamlines adding data validation to your cells.

7. Data tables
Tables are a great way to structure and format your source data. They can automatically expand as the data grows, and apply styling automatically. They also play nicely with other Excel tools like Power Query, PivotTables, and Slicers.
Anytime you have tabular data that feeds into formulas or PivotTables, make it a point to set it up as a table. See the screenshot below for an example.

8. Modern formulas

9. Freeze panes (on every sheet)
Freeze panes is a feature that most Excel users know about and use regularly. But it’s still something I see forgotten in many sheets that would make them easier to use. Make it a point to add freeze panes as soon as you start setting up your sheets, and adjust if you need to. You might also consider putting totals and other key data points at the top above your data so you don’t have to scroll down to find them.
See the screenshot below for an example of a good place to put freeze panes in a common P&L report structure. Two tools I’ve used over the years to apply freeze panes (and many more settings!) to a lot of sheets at once are the Freeze Selected Sheets, Bulk Update Sheets, and Multi Sheet Format macros.

10. Visualizations
I see way too many Excel files with no visuals in them, and it makes it easy to get lost in a sea of data. Visuals like charts and icons make it exponentially easier to understand data, and may just prevent you from missing something important.
Between standard charts, PivotCharts, sparklines, and even conditional formatting icons, Excel has a variety of tools that make building visuals easy and powerful. Make sure you use the right kind of chart for the job – here are three common examples:
- Use line charts to show trends
- Use column/bar charts to show comparisons and rankings
- Use pie/donut charts to show parts of the whole
See the screenshot below for an example of some visuals I used in the past that really helped the data come alive by using charts that have the data points accompanying them below.

Video
Summary
If you want to stand out on your team, it’s important to be thoughtful and make things as easy as you can for everyone – including your future self. That’s exactly how these 10 items were compiled – with the goal of making files easy to navigate, evaluate, and update. For your most important files, and the ones you use most, spend a little time making sure you’ve considered these items and add them a little at a time. Or go nuts if you have the bandwidth. You’ll be thankful you did!
How do these 10 items compare to your quality checklist? Which was your favorite? Let us know in the comments below!

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