title: “How To Freeze Column And Row Headings In Excel” ShowToc: true date: “2023-01-23” author: “Dolores Guarini”

Freeze the Top Row

Follow these three steps to get your worksheet’s header to stay in place.

Select View on the ribbon. Select Freeze Panes. If you’re using Excel for Mac, skip this step. Select Freeze Top Row. A border appears just below Row 1 to indicate that the area above the line has been frozen. The data in row 1 remains visible as you scroll because the entire row is pinned to the top.

Freeze the First Column

To freeze the first column of a worksheet:

Select View. Select Freeze Panes. If you’re using Excel for Mac, skip this step. Select Freeze First Column. The entire column A area is frozen, indicated by the black border between columns A and B. Enter some data into column A and scroll to the right; you’ll see the data move with you.

Freeze Both Columns and Rows

To keep specified rows and columns visible:

Select a cell below the row that you want to freeze and to the right of the column you want to freeze. These are the rows and columns that will stay visible when you scroll. Select View. Select Freeze Panes. If you’re using Excel for Mac, skip this step. Select Freeze Panes. Two black lines appear on the sheet to show which panes are frozen. The rows above the horizontal line are kept visible while scrolling. The columns to the left of the vertical line are kept visible while scrolling.

Unfreeze Columns and Rows

When you no longer want certain rows and columns to stay in place when you scroll, unfreeze all the panes in Excel. The data in the frames will remain, but the rows and columns that were frozen will return to their original positions.

To unfreeze panes, select View > Freeze Panes > Unfreeze Panes. On Excel for Mac, select View > Unfreeze Panes instead.