Table of Contents
What is a Moving Average?
Calculating Simple Moving Averages in Excel
Calculating Moving Averages for a Specific Time Period
Calculating Moving Averages for the Last N Days/Weeks/Months/Years
Calculating Moving Averages for the Last N Values in a Row
Creating a Moving Average Chart in Excel
Home Software Tutorial Office Software Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Apr 29, 2025 am 09:47 AM

This tutorial shows you how to quickly calculate simple moving averages in Excel, using functions to determine moving averages over the last N days, weeks, months, or years, and how to add a moving average trendline to your charts.

Previous articles covered calculating standard and weighted averages in Excel. This tutorial explains two methods for calculating moving averages.

What is a Moving Average?

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

A moving average (also called a rolling average, running average, or moving mean) is a series of averages calculated across subsets of a dataset. It's used in statistics, economic forecasting, and weather prediction to identify underlying trends. In finance, it indicates a security's average value over a specific period. Businesses often use moving averages of sales (e.g., the last three months) to track recent trends.

For example, a three-month moving average of temperatures would average January-March temperatures, then February-April, March-May, and so on. Several types of moving averages exist (simple, exponential, variable, triangular, weighted), but this tutorial focuses on the common simple moving average.

Calculating Simple Moving Averages in Excel

Two methods exist: using formulas and trendlines.

Calculating Moving Averages for a Specific Time Period

The AVERAGE function easily calculates simple moving averages. If column B contains average monthly temperatures, and you need a three-month moving average (as in the image above):

In the cell corresponding to the third month (C4 in the example), enter: =AVERAGE(B2:B4)

Copy this formula down. Use relative row references (without $) for proper adjustment. You can verify the result using the SUM function: =SUM(B2:B4)/3

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Calculating Moving Averages for the Last N Days/Weeks/Months/Years

For data like sales or stock quotes, where you want the average of the last three months at any time, you need a formula that recalculates with each new month's entry. Combine AVERAGE with OFFSET and COUNT:

=AVERAGE(OFFSET(*first cell*, COUNT(*entire range*)-*N*,0,*N*,1))

Where N is the number of periods (days, weeks, months, years).

Example: If data is in column B starting at row 2, and you want the last three months' average:

=AVERAGE(OFFSET(B2,COUNT(B2:B100)-3,0,3,1))

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Explanation:

  • COUNT(B2:B100) counts entries in column B.
  • OFFSET starts at B2, moves up COUNT(B2:B100)-3 rows, creating a range of 3 rows and 1 column (the last three months).
  • AVERAGE calculates the average of this range.

Tip: Use a large range in COUNT (like B2:B100) to accommodate future data additions.

Calculating Moving Averages for the Last N Values in a Row

To calculate a moving average for the last N values in a row, adjust the OFFSET formula:

=AVERAGE(OFFSET(*first cell*,0,COUNT(*range*)*-N*,1,*N*))

Example: If B2 is the first cell, and you want the average of the last three numbers in the row:

=AVERAGE(OFFSET(B2,0,COUNT(B2:N2)-3,1,3))

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Creating a Moving Average Chart in Excel

Adding a moving average trendline to an existing chart is simple using Excel's Trendline feature.

  1. Select the chart. In Excel 2013, go to Design > Add Chart Element > Trendline > More Trendline Options…. In Excel 2010/2007, go to Layout > Trendline > More Trendline Options. For a quick result without detailed settings, click Moving Average.

  2. The Format Trendline pane (Excel 2013) or dialog box (Excel 2010/2007) appears. Select Moving Average and specify the period (interval).

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

  1. The trendline is added to your chart.

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

Customize the line style using the Fill & Line or Effects tabs. Add multiple trendlines with different periods for a comprehensive analysis.

 Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts

This tutorial covers calculating moving averages in Excel. A sample workbook is available for download.

The above is the detailed content of Calculate moving average in Excel: formulas and charts. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

Statement of this Website
The content of this article is voluntarily contributed by netizens, and the copyright belongs to the original author. This site does not assume corresponding legal responsibility. If you find any content suspected of plagiarism or infringement, please contact admin@php.cn

Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress

Undresser.AI Undress

AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover

AI Clothes Remover

Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool

Undress AI Tool

Undress images for free

Clothoff.io

Clothoff.io

AI clothes remover

Video Face Swap

Video Face Swap

Swap faces in any video effortlessly with our completely free AI face swap tool!

Hot Tools

Notepad++7.3.1

Notepad++7.3.1

Easy-to-use and free code editor

SublimeText3 Chinese version

SublimeText3 Chinese version

Chinese version, very easy to use

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Zend Studio 13.0.1

Powerful PHP integrated development environment

Dreamweaver CS6

Dreamweaver CS6

Visual web development tools

SublimeText3 Mac version

SublimeText3 Mac version

God-level code editing software (SublimeText3)

Hot Topics

Java Tutorial
1664
14
PHP Tutorial
1266
29
C# Tutorial
1239
24
If You Don't Rename Tables in Excel, Today's the Day to Start If You Don't Rename Tables in Excel, Today's the Day to Start Apr 15, 2025 am 12:58 AM

Quick link Why should tables be named in Excel How to name a table in Excel Excel table naming rules and techniques By default, tables in Excel are named Table1, Table2, Table3, and so on. However, you don't have to stick to these tags. In fact, it would be better if you don't! In this quick guide, I will explain why you should always rename tables in Excel and show you how to do this. Why should tables be named in Excel While it may take some time to develop the habit of naming tables in Excel (if you don't usually do this), the following reasons illustrate today

How to change Excel table styles and remove table formatting How to change Excel table styles and remove table formatting Apr 19, 2025 am 11:45 AM

This tutorial shows you how to quickly apply, modify, and remove Excel table styles while preserving all table functionalities. Want to make your Excel tables look exactly how you want? Read on! After creating an Excel table, the first step is usual

How to Format a Spilled Array in Excel How to Format a Spilled Array in Excel Apr 10, 2025 pm 12:01 PM

Use formula conditional formatting to handle overflow arrays in Excel Direct formatting of overflow arrays in Excel can cause problems, especially when the data shape or size changes. Formula-based conditional formatting rules allow automatic formatting to be adjusted when data parameters change. Adding a dollar sign ($) before a column reference applies a rule to all rows in the data. In Excel, you can apply direct formatting to the values ​​or background of a cell to make the spreadsheet easier to read. However, when an Excel formula returns a set of values ​​(called overflow arrays), applying direct formatting will cause problems if the size or shape of the data changes. Suppose you have this spreadsheet with overflow results from the PIVOTBY formula,

Excel MATCH function with formula examples Excel MATCH function with formula examples Apr 15, 2025 am 11:21 AM

This tutorial explains how to use MATCH function in Excel with formula examples. It also shows how to improve your lookup formulas by a making dynamic formula with VLOOKUP and MATCH. In Microsoft Excel, there are many different lookup/ref

How to Use the PIVOTBY Function in Excel How to Use the PIVOTBY Function in Excel Apr 11, 2025 am 12:56 AM

Quick Links The PIVOTBY Syntax

Excel: Compare strings in two cells for matches (case-insensitive or exact) Excel: Compare strings in two cells for matches (case-insensitive or exact) Apr 16, 2025 am 11:26 AM

The tutorial shows how to compare text strings in Excel for case-insensitive and exact match. You will learn a number of formulas to compare two cells by their values, string length, or the number of occurrences of a specific character, a

How to Make Your Excel Spreadsheet Accessible to All How to Make Your Excel Spreadsheet Accessible to All Apr 18, 2025 am 01:06 AM

Improve the accessibility of Excel tables: A practical guide When creating a Microsoft Excel workbook, be sure to take the necessary steps to make sure everyone has access to it, especially if you plan to share the workbook with others. This guide will share some practical tips to help you achieve this. Use a descriptive worksheet name One way to improve accessibility of Excel workbooks is to change the name of the worksheet. By default, Excel worksheets are named Sheet1, Sheet2, Sheet3, etc. This non-descriptive numbering system will continue when you click " " to add a new worksheet. There are multiple benefits to changing the worksheet name to make it more accurate to describe the worksheet content: carry

How to Use Excel's AGGREGATE Function to Refine Calculations How to Use Excel's AGGREGATE Function to Refine Calculations Apr 12, 2025 am 12:54 AM

Quick Links The AGGREGATE Syntax

See all articles