What is Chart/Graph Maker?

Create bar, horizontal bar, line, pie, doughnut, area, scatter, and radar charts from your data. Pick a chart type, set your colors and labels, then download as PNG or SVG. No coding needed.

Add data points by typing labels and values, paste a comma-separated list to fill the table in one go, or upload a CSV file. Eight chart types are supported: bar, horizontal bar, line, pie, doughnut, area, scatter, and radar. Each data point gets its own colour, and you can edit the chart title, axis labels, legend visibility, and toggle on-chart data labels. The preview redraws instantly and exports as a high-resolution PNG or a scalable SVG vector.

How to use

  1. Enter your data labels and values, or paste comma-separated data directly.
  2. Select a chart type (bar, horizontal bar, line, pie, doughnut, area, scatter, or radar) and customize colors, title, and axis labels.
  3. Preview your chart, then download it as a high-resolution PNG or a scalable SVG vector for presentations, reports, or editing in Illustrator and Figma.

When to use

  • Building a single chart for a slide deck without opening Excel, Sheets, or BI tools.
  • Visualising survey results before deciding which chart type tells the story best.
  • Producing matching-colour charts across a report so they feel like one document.

Result

A marketing manager creates a bar chart comparing Q1–Q4 website traffic (45K, 62K, 58K, 71K visits) with branded colors to include in a quarterly board presentation.

FAQ

Which chart type should I pick for my data?
Bar and line work for comparing values across categories or showing trends over time; switch to horizontal bar when category names are long or you want a ranked list. Pie and doughnut are best for parts of a whole when you have three to five slices. Scatter plots each value as a point, handy for spotting spread. Radar suits multi-attribute comparisons, and area is a stylised line chart for cumulative totals. For comparing two or three sets of numbers on a bar chart, add extra series and pick grouped bars, stacked bars, or a combo of bars with a line overlay.
Can I import data from a CSV or spreadsheet?
Yes. Use Upload CSV to load a .csv or .tsv file, or click Paste data and paste columns straight from Excel, Google Sheets, or Numbers. The first column becomes the label and the second becomes the value; a third and fourth column, if present, fill the second and third data series for grouped, stacked, or combo bar charts. A header row is detected automatically and skipped.
Why does my pie chart look squashed or unbalanced?
Pie charts only make sense when the values add up to a meaningful whole (like 100% of survey respondents). If one slice is over 70% or values are wildly different scales, switch to a bar chart — it shows the same data more accurately.
Can I get a transparent background or a vector file?
Yes. Click Download SVG for a scalable vector with a transparent background — open it in Illustrator, Figma, or Inkscape to edit colours and text without losing quality. Download PNG gives a high-resolution raster with a white background, ideal for slide decks where transparency isn't needed.
How do I change the colours of individual bars or slices?
Each row in the data table has a colour swatch next to it. Click the swatch to pick a custom hex code. The default rotation cycles through ten contrasting palette colours, but every data point can be overridden individually.

Related Tools