Here’s an overview of the Print menu in Excel. You can choose your printer, and you can change print settings including what to print, how many copies to print, page orientation, paper size, margin, and scaling options. Pressing Ctrl + P takes you to this menu. Note: We have used Excel for Microsoft 365 to prepare this article. ⏷ Printing Options in Excel
⏷ Print an Excel Worksheet in One Page
⏷ Print Selected Ranges
⏷ Print a Workbook to a PDF or Other File
⏷ How to Print Formulas
⏷ Print an Excel Chart
⏷ Print Tables in Excel
⏷ How to Print Gridlines
⏷ Print Titles for Better Documentation
⏷ Print Header and Footers on Each Page
⏷ Print Comments in Excel
⏷ Print Background in Excel
⏷ Adding a Print Button in Excel
⏷ Inserting Page Breaks
You can print any Excel dataset, multiple sheets, or the entire workbook using options in the Print menu or Page Layout tab.
In the print window of Excel, you will find two segments.
On the left, you will find the Print button, Printer list, and all the Print settings.
On the right, you will find the print preview window.
Using the features of Print Settings, you can easily set the format of your printed Excel document.
Right beside the Print button, you can specify how many copies of your document you want to print. You can print up to 32,767 copies.
You will see all the available printers in the following list.
Case 1 – Print Active Sheets
Allows you to print only the currently active sheets in your workbook. You can press and hold CTRL to print multiple sheets. Case 2 – Print Entire Workbook
It prints all the sheets in your workbook. This option is helpful when you need a hard file copy of the entire workbook. Case 3 – Print Selection
This option only focuses on the selected area or range of cells. Useful for printing specific information. Case 4 – Print Selected Table
If you select any cell in a table, you will also see this option in the Print menu. Case 5 – Print Selected Chart
If you select any chart, you will see this option in the Print menu, and all other menus will be greyed out.
You can choose any paper size for printing, like letter, legal, or A4.
Page margins act as a visual boundary between the content and the edge of the paper. There are a few options available by default: Normal, Wide, and Narrow. Additionally, you can set Custom Margins depending on your content.
To adjust the size of the printed content in the paper, you can use these page scaling options.
Case 1 – No Scaling
This option allows you to print without applying any scaling adjustments to your sheet content.
Case 2 – Fit Sheet on One Page
It ensures each sheet content fits on one page. If you have 3 sheets, you’ll see 3 pages in the print preview, each displaying the entire content of a separate sheet.
Case 3 – Fit All Columns on One Page
This option helps you to put all your columns together on a single page. It scales the width of the columns to fit them on a single page.
Case 4 – Fit All Rows on One Page
It makes all the rows visible on one page. This option scales the height of the rows to fit them on a single page providing a complete view.
If you want to customize the scaling of your document, you can use the Custom Scaling Options.
You can look at how your printed documents will be in the Print Preview option.
You can find Print Preview using any of the following options.
You can also find the following features in Print Preview.
1 – Margins Mover
Generally, it makes the margins wider or narrower. You can drag them to adjust the size.
2 – Column Width Mover
You can adjust the cell widths by dragging the handles at the top of the print preview window.
3 – Page Navigator
Using this option, you can navigate to any page.
4 – Show Margins Option
By default, the margins are hidden in the print preview window. You can show the margins using this option.
5 – Zoom to Page
This option will help you to see the paper by zooming in. To zoom out again click this option.
Larger worksheets get broken in the middle and go to additional pages which is difficult to use. Here’s an example of such a document.
In the above image, you can see that the selected range is divided into four pages, which is evidently not what you intended.
We want to print only the B5:E11 range.
If you select multiple ranges of cells to print, each range will be printed on separate pages. Even though you select the Fit Sheet on One Page option. To select multiple ranges, hold the CTRL key while selecting.
Here, we have selected Microsoft Print to PDF since we currently have no printer connected. This selection will proceed to create a PDF file, which we can later convert to a hard copy using a printer.
How to Print the Same Range in Multiple Sheets
In the following printed document, we see that the column headings are not there at every page.
If the column headings were at the top of every page, then it would be more helpful for the users of the printed copy.
Steps to Print Titles:
Step 1 – Insert Shape
Step 2 – Change Background Fill
Step 3 – Format Shape
Step 4 – Background Print Preview
To see the page breaks based on the current print settings:
The worksheet will switch to Page Break Preview mode, showing solid blue lines indicating the page breaks.
You can also adjust the page break manually by dragging the line using the mouse.
To exit Page Break Preview, click on Normal in the Workbook Views group.
If you want to remove the page break:
Download the Practice Workbook