![]() |
% calculations
I am looking to compare actuals to budgeted amounts.
The actuals are real $. The amount budgeted was $0.00. I need the percentage over. What formula can I use to get the % over budget in Excel? |
% calculations
Hi Christy
Assuming your real data is in A1 and your budget in B1 then enter in C1 =IF(B1<1,"Not Applicable",A1/B1) Format Cell C1 as Percentage, copy down column C as far as required If the Budget is 0, you cannot have a percentage increase, as this would be infinity (and Excel would throw up a #DIV/0 error), hence the If test at the beginning of the formula. -- Regards Roger Govier "ChristyB" wrote in message ... I am looking to compare actuals to budgeted amounts. The actuals are real $. The amount budgeted was $0.00. I need the percentage over. What formula can I use to get the % over budget in Excel? |
% calculations
=actual/budget
formatted as percentage, or maybe =actual/budget-1 to get just the percentage over -- HTH Bob Phillips (remove nothere from email address if mailing direct) "ChristyB" wrote in message ... I am looking to compare actuals to budgeted amounts. The actuals are real $. The amount budgeted was $0.00. I need the percentage over. What formula can I use to get the % over budget in Excel? |
% calculations
"Roger Govier" wrote:
Assuming your real data is in A1 and your budget in B1 then enter in C1 =IF(B1<1,"Not Applicable",A1/B1) I think the condition should be "B1 <= 0". |
% calculations
"ChristyB" wrote:
The actuals are real $. The amount budgeted was $0.00. I need the percentage over. What formula can I use to get the % over budget in Excel? As you probably, mathematically there is no answer. But that does not stop people from wanting a "reasonable" result to put into presentations. The choice is arbitrary and subjective. There is no right or wrong. Do you want a blank? Do you want a constant, like 100%? Or do you want a percentage that scales by the amount commensurate with the size of the budget or "typical" budget item? (Most people prefer a blank or a number, not words like "not applicable" or "NA".) Some formulations of each: =if(B1<=0, "", A1/B1 - 1) =if(B1<=0, 100%, A1/B1 - 1) =if(B1<=0, A1, A1/B1 - 1) =if(B1<=0, round(A1/1000,0), A1/B1 - 1) The latter is a multiple of 100% times the rounded number of $1000 increments. Thus, 100% if A1 is $500-$1499 and 200% if A1 is $1500-$2499. Note: Using "<=" is called "defensive programming". You might prefer "B1=0", especially if you know the budget value is never less than zero ;-). |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:22 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com