To resolve circular references, you’ll need to find the cell(s) with incorrect cell references and adjust as needed. The article below provides more information and steps to resolve. This creates a circular reference because the formula, entered in cell F7, refers to F7. This in turn throws off other formula results in D7, C11, and D11: Circular references can cause many problems (and a lot of confusion) because they may cause other formulas to return zero, or a different incorrect result.

The circular reference error message

When a circular reference occurs in a spreadsheet, you’ll see a warning like this: “There are one or more circular references where a formula refers to its own cell either directly or indirectly. This might cause them to calculate incorrectly. Try removing or changing these references, or moving the formulas to different cells.”

This warning will appear sporadically while editing, or when a worksheet is opened.

Finding and fixing circular references

To resolve circular references, you’ll need to find the cell(s) with incorrect cell references and adjust as needed. However, unlike other errors (#N/A, #VALUE!, etc.) circular references don’t appear directly in the cell. To find the source of a circular reference error, use the Error Checking menu on the Formulas tab of the ribbon.

Select the Circular References item to see the source of circular references:

Below, the circular reference has been fixed and other formulas now return correct results:

Dave Bruns

Hi - I’m Dave Bruns, and I run Exceljet with my wife, Lisa. Our goal is to help you work faster in Excel. We create short videos, and clear examples of formulas, functions, pivot tables, conditional formatting, and charts.

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