Creating a Box Plot in Older Excel Versions (2013, 2010, 2007) Note: The crosses that you can see in each box indicate the mean of the dataset.
We are going to create the box plot based on the dataset shown below:
HOW TO READ A BOX AND WHISKER PLOT HOW TO
So, in this tutorial, we will show you how to create a box plot in both older as well as newer Excel versions. The box plot was included as a separate charting option only from Excel 2016 onwards. Up until Excel 2016, there was no separate feature in Excel to create box plots.Īs such, in older versions, if you need to create a box plot, you need to improvise a stacked chart and convert it into a box plot.
Now that we understand box plots a little better, let us see how to create them in Excel. From the above chart we can see that the highest salary paid by the company is $10,000.
The tip of the top whisker (line) marks the maximum value in the data.Let us interpret this chart by looking at its 5 indicators: The image below shows employee salaries of a given company: How to Interpret a Box Plotīefore we see how to create a box plot (also called a box and whisker chart), let us first learn to understand and interpret a box plot. In this way, box plots also help us find outliers and can tell if the data is symmetric or skewed.īox plots are especially helpful when you want to compare different sample distributions, and since it provides a 5-point summary of the entire dataset, it is really useful when the datasets you are studying are very large. They can be quite helpful when you want to see how the data is distributed and the range to which the data extends. Why Use a Box Plot?Ī box plot is a great way to visually summarize your data using 5 descriptive indicators. The width of the box basically marks the most concentrated area of the data distribution.Ī box plot can also contain ‘whiskers’ which are simply lines that depict the minimum and maximum values that are outside the first and third quartiles. The main ‘box’ of the box plot is drawn between the first and third quartiles, with an additional line drawn to represent the second quartile, or the ‘median’. The box plot divides numerical data into ‘quartiles’ or four parts. An example of a Box Plot chart created in Excel