In Google Sheets, understanding data types is essential for accurate calculations, formatting, and analysis.
A data type defines the kind of value stored in a cell. Using the correct data type ensures formulas work properly and data is displayed correctly.
1. Text
Text includes words, letters, symbols, or any combination of characters that are not used for calculations.
Examples include
Names
Addresses
Product codes
Descriptions
Text values are typically left aligned by default.
2. Numbers
Numbers are numeric values used for calculations.
Examples include
Sales amounts
Quantities
Scores
Age
Numbers are right aligned by default and can be used in formulas such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
3. Date
Dates represent calendar values.
Examples include
01 January 2026
12 25 2025
Google Sheets stores dates as serial numbers internally, allowing calculations such as date differences or adding days.
4. Time
Time values represent hours, minutes, and seconds.
Examples include
10 30 AM
15 45
Time can be calculated, such as finding duration between two time values.
5. Currency
Currency is a formatted number that represents monetary values.
Examples include
100 USD
5000 PKR
Currency formatting adds symbols and decimal precision while keeping the value numeric for calculations.
6. Percentage
Percentage represents a number as a fraction of 100.
For example
50 percent is stored as 0.5
75 percent is stored as 0.75
Percentages are commonly used in performance reports and growth calculations.
7. Boolean
Boolean values represent logical states.
There are only two Boolean values
TRUE
FALSE
These are commonly used in logical formulas such as IF statements.
8. Formulas
A formula is an expression that performs calculations using cell references and functions.
All formulas begin with an equal sign.
Examples include
Equal sign A1 plus B1
Equal sign SUM A1 to A10
Formulas automatically update when referenced data changes.
Why Data Types Matter
Using correct data types helps
Avoid calculation errors
Ensure proper formatting
Improve data analysis accuracy
Create reliable reports
Incorrect data types can cause formulas to return errors or incorrect results.
Conclusion
Understanding data types in Google Sheets is a fundamental skill for effective spreadsheet use.
When you correctly apply text, numbers, dates, percentages, and formulas, you improve data accuracy, reporting quality, and overall efficiency.