You can use a simple formula to sum numbers in a range (a group of cells), but the SUM function is easier to use when you’re working with more than a few numbers. For example =SUM(A2:A6) is less likely to have typing errors than =A2+A3+A4+A5+A6.
Here’s a formula that uses two cell ranges: =SUM(A2:A4,C2:C3) sums the numbers in ranges A2:A4 and C2:C3. You’d press Enter to get the total of 39787.
To create the formula:
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Type =SUM in a cell, followed by an opening parenthesis (.
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To enter the first formula range, which is called an argument (a piece of data the formula needs to run), type A2:A4 (or select cell A2 and drag through cell A6).
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Type a comma (,) to separate the first argument from the next.
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Type the second argument, C2:C3 (or drag to select the cells).
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Type a closing parenthesis ), and then press Enter.
Each argument can be a range, a number, or single cell references, all separated by commas.
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=SUM(A2:A4,2429,10482)
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=SUM(4823,A3:A4,C2:C3)
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=SUM(4823,12335,9718,C2:C3)
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=SUM(A2,A3,A4,2429,10482)
Tip: If you need to sum columns or rows of numbers next to each other, use AutoSum to sum numbers.
Give it a try
If you want to play around with our sample data, here’s some data to use.
You can see how the SUM function works by copying the following table into a worksheet and pasting it into cell A1.
Data |
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-5 |
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15 |
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30 |
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'5 |
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TRUE |
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Formula |
Description |
Result |
=SUM(3, 2) |
Adds 3 and 2. |
5 |
=SUM("5", 15, TRUE) |
Adds 5, 15 and 1. The text value "5" is first translated into a number, and the logical value TRUE is first translated into the number 1. |
21 |
=SUM(A2:A4) |
Adds the values in cells A2 through A4. |
40 |
=SUM(A2:A4, 15) |
Adds the values in cells A2 through A4, and then adds 15 to that result. |
55 |
=SUM(A5,A6, 2) |
Adds the values in cells A5 and A6, and then adds 2 to that result. Because non-numeric values in references are not translated — the value in cell A5 ('5) and the value in cell A6 (TRUE) are both treated as text — the values in those cells are ignored. |
2 |
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