Skip to content
Free Excel Tutorials
  • Home
  • Excel For Beginners
  • Excel Intermediate
  • Advanced Excel For Experts

Data Analysis

  • Create Scatter Chart in Excel
  • How To Create Pareto Chart in Excel
  • Subtotal function in Excel
  • Conditional Formatting Color Scales Examples in Excel
  • Excel Line Chart

References

  • Basic INDEX MATCH approximate in Excel
  • Count unique text values with criteria
  • LOOKUP function: Description, Usage, Syntax, Examples and Explanation
  • How to use Excel MATCH Function
  • How to use Excel INDIRECT Function

Data Validations

  • Excel Data validation must contain specific text
  • Excel Data validation unique values only
  • Excel Data validation only dates between
  • How To Create Drop-down List in Excel
  • Excel Data validation date in specific year

How to find and replace multiple values at same time in Excel

by

To find and replace multiple values with a formula, you can nest multiple SUBSTITUTE functions together, and feed in find/replace pairs from another table using the INDEX function.

Formula

=SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(B5,INDEX(find,1),INDEX(replace,1)),
INDEX(find,2),INDEX(replace,2))

How to find and replace multiple values at same time in Excel

Explanation

In the example shown, we are performing 4 separate find and replace operations. The formula in G5 is:

=SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(B5,INDEX(find,1),
INDEX(replace,1)),INDEX(find,2),INDEX(replace,2)),
INDEX(find,3),INDEX(replace,3)),INDEX(find,4),INDEX(replace,4))

where “find” is the named range E5:E8, and “replace” is the named range F5:F8. See below for info on how to make this formula easier to read.

Preface

There is no built-in formula for running a series of find and replace operations in Excel, so this a “concept” formula to show one approach. The text to look for and replace with is stored directly on the worksheet in a table, and retrieved with the INDEX function. This makes the solution “dynamic” – any of these values are changed, results update immediately. Of course, there is no requirement to use INDEX; you can hard-code values into the formula if you prefer.

How this formula works

At the core, the formula uses the SUBSTITUTE function to perform the each substitution, with this basic pattern:

=SUBSTITUTE(text,find,replace)

“Text” is the incoming value, “find” is the text to look for, and “replace” is the text to replace with. The text to look for and replace with is stored in the table to the right, in the range E5:F8, one pair per row. The values on the left are in the named range”find”and the values on the right are in the named range “replace”.  The INDEX function is used to retrieve both the “find” text and the “replace” text like this:

INDEX(find,1) // first "find" value
INDEX(replace,1) // first "replace" value

So, to run the first substitution (look for “red”, replace with “pink”) we use:

=SUBSTITUTE(B5,INDEX(find,1),INDEX(replace,1))

In total, we run four separate substitutions, and each subsequent SUBSTITUTE begins with the result from the previous SUBSTITUTE:

=SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(B5,INDEX(find,1),
INDEX(replace,1)),INDEX(find,2),INDEX(replace,2)),
INDEX(find,3),INDEX(replace,3)),INDEX(find,4),INDEX(replace,4))

Line breaks for readability

You’ll notice this kind of nested formula is quite difficult to read. By adding line breaks, we can make the formula much easier to read and maintain:

=
SUBSTITUTE(
SUBSTITUTE(
SUBSTITUTE(
SUBSTITUTE(
B5,
INDEX(find,1),INDEX(replace,1)),
INDEX(find,2),INDEX(replace,2)),
INDEX(find,3),INDEX(replace,3)),
INDEX(find,4),INDEX(replace,4))

The formula bar in Excel ignores extra white space and line breaks, so the above formula can be pasted in directly:

How to find and replace multiple values at same time in Excel

By the way, there is a keyboard shortcut for expanding and collapsing the formula bar.

More substitutions

More rows can be added to the table to handle more find/replace pairs. Each time a pair is added, the formula needs to be updated to include the new pair. It’s important also to make sure the named ranges (if you are using them) are updated to include new values as needed. Alternately, you could use a proper Excel Table for dynamic ranges, instead of named ranges.

Other uses

The same approach can be used clean up text by “stripping” punctuation and other symbols from text with a series of substitutions.

Post navigation

Next Post:

Create One-dimensional and Two-dimensional Array

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Learn Basic Excel

Ribbon
Workbook
Worksheets
Format Cells
Find & Select
Sort & Filter
Templates
Print
Share
Protect
Keyboard Shortcuts

Categories

  • Charts
  • Data Analysis
  • Data Validation
  • Excel Functions
    • Cube Functions
    • Database Functions
    • Date and Time Functions
    • Engineering Functions
    • Financial Functions
    • Information Functions
    • Logical Functions
    • Lookup and Reference Functions
    • Math and Trig Functions
    • Statistical Functions
    • Text Functions
    • Web Functions
  • Excel VBA
  • Excel Video Tutorials
  • Formatting
  • Grouping
  • Others

Logical Functions

  • Nested IF function example in Excel
  • Extract multiple matches into separate rows in Excel
  • Return blank if in Excel
  • How to use Excel FALSE Function
  • How to use Excel OR Function

Date Time

  • How to calculate future date say 6 months ahead in Excel
  • How to calculate most recent day of week in Excel
  • Get first Monday before any date in Excel
  • Extract time from a date and time in Excel
  • Display Days until expiration date in Excel

Grouping

  • Categorize text with keywords in Excel
  • If cell contains one of many things in Excel
  • Map inputs to arbitrary values in Excel
  • Running count group by n size in Excel
  • Group times into 3 hour buckets in Excel

General

  • Hide and Unhide Columns or Rows in Excel
  • AutoFit Column Width, AutoFit Row Height in Excel
  • How to add sequential row numbers to a set of data in Excel
  • 231 Keyboard Shortcut Keys In Excel
  • Excel Operators
© 2025 xlsoffice . All Right Reserved. | Teal Smiles | Abbreviations And Their Meaning