You can easily add bullet points in a cell Excel (Yes.. easily). Until I knew this trick, I used to put a dash (-) or arrow greater than (») at the beginning of the text, and that could sometimes be a pain. I always wondered why was Excel devoid of such basic functionality. But that was just my ignorance. There is not one, but many ways to add bullet points in a cell in Excel.

How to Add Bullet Points in Excel

In this tutorial, you’ll learn various ways to insert bullet points in Excel. While all these methods are quite simple, you only need to know a couple to get your work done.

Using Keyboard Shortcut

You can quickly insert bullet points in Excel using the following keyboard shortcuts. If you have a numeric keypad on your keyboard:

Select the cell in which you want to insert the bullet. Either double click on the cell or press F2 – to get into edit mode. Hold the ALT key, press 7 or 9, leave the ALT key. As soon as you leave the ALT key, a bullet would appear.

ALT + 7 and ALT + 9 both inserts a different kind of bullet (see below):

If you do not have a numeric Keyboard (like my laptop), activate the NumLock first and then repeat the above steps (or try with ALT + FUNCTION + 7) If you want to insert more bullet points in the same cell, in the case of having a list in a single cell, repeat the same steps. For example, if you are building a list in a cell, enter the bullet followed by the item name, press Alt + Enter to insert a line break, and then insert the bullet again (as shown below):

Note: Once you have the bullet in a cell, you can copy it like any other character.

Using Insert Symbol Dialogue Box

You can use the Insert Symbol option in Excel to insert bullet points in Excel. Here are the steps:

Go to Insert –> Symbols –> Symbol. In the Symbols dialogue box, within the Symbols tab, select the Font. Scroll down the symbols list and select the bullet you want to insert. Click on the Insert button.

This will insert the bullet in the selected cell. Once you have the bullet in a cell, you can copy-paste it wherever you need it.

Using the CHAR Function

You can also use the CHAR function to insert bullet points in Excel. If you enter =CHAR(149) in Excel, it automatically gets converted into a bullet.

This could be useful when you have a list of items and you want to add a bullet to all the items at one go. Something as shown below:

In the above example, bullet points were added to the list of fruits in A1:A4. Here is the formula used in cell B1: CHAR(149) inserts the bullet and a space character ensures there is space after the bullet and before the item name.

Using Custom Number Formatting

This one is awesome. You can use custom number formatting to automatically insert bullets in excel as soon as you enter anything in a cell. Something as shown below:

Magic. Isn’t it? Well… Sort of 🙂 What’s working here in the back end is a nifty custom number formatting trick. Before I get to the trick, here is what you need to know about custom number formatting in Excel. It allows you to specify the format for four kinds of data type: Using custom number formatting, you can specify how each of these data types would be displayed in the cell. Using this, I can customize cells so that a bullet is automatically displayed as soon as you enter anything in it. Here are the steps to do it:

In any cell, insert a bullet (use the shortcut or insert symbol technique shown above). Double click on the cell that has the bullet (or press F2 to get into the edit mode), select the bullet, and copy it. Select the cells on which you want to apply the custom number format (so that the bullet points are automatically inserted). Press Control + 1. It will open the Format Cells Dialogue box. In the Number Tab, select Custom. In the type field, enter:  • General;• General;• General;• General Click OK.

That’s it. Go to the cells and try entering anything. It will automatically show the bullet at the beginning.

Copy Pasting a list from MS Word or PowerPoint

You can easily copy and paste a list with bullet points from MS Word into Excel. If you have a bullet point list in Word, you can paste it in either a single cell in Excel, or get each bullet point in a different cell. (Note: Copied list from Word and PowerPoint behave a bit differently when pasted in Excel).

Copy bullet points in a single cell

Copy the bullet points from Word. Double-click on the cell where you want to copy the list. Press Control + V to paste it.

This will paste the bullet list in the same cell. Note: In this case, MS Word and PowerPoint behaves differently. While the bullet list from word gets pasted as is (as shown above), the one from PowerPoint gets pasted without the bullet points.

Copy bullet points in different cells

Copy the bullet points from Word or PowerPoint. Select the cell where you want to copy the list. Press Control + V to paste it.

These are the five simple ways you can use to add bullet points in Excel. Every method has its own benefits and can be used accordingly. Hope you have enjoyed this article. Let me know your thoughts by leaving a comment below.

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“● A” & “● B” concatenated will result in “● AB”, instead of “● A● B” with the other methods. However, if you have different symbols in the formatting and concatenate or add, the formatting of the result can be unpredictable.