How to Edit a Table in Excel | Resize, Add & Delete Rows

An Excel table can be edited by resizing it, adding or removing rows and columns, changing its style, or removing duplicates from the Table Design tab.

Most Excel users never touch the Table Design tab — and that’s where almost every editing feature actually lives. Learning how to edit a table in Excel comes down to knowing which tab and tool handles each task. Whether the job is resizing the range, adding more rows, stripping out duplicates, or just changing the look, the controls are all in one place once the data is formatted as a table.

What Counts As Editing an Excel Table?

Editing an Excel table covers any change to the table’s size, structure, content, style, or built-in settings. That includes resizing the cell range, inserting or deleting rows and columns, switching the table style, managing duplicate entries, and toggling features like the total row or filters. Microsoft treats an Excel table as a formatted range that automatically expands when new data is added — so most edits are simpler than they first appear.

Creating a Table Before You Edit It

You can’t edit what isn’t a table yet. To convert a regular data range into a table, select any cell inside the data, go to Home > Format as Table, pick a style, confirm the cell range in the Create Table dialog, and check the box if your range has headers. Click OK, and the contextual Table Design tab appears every time a cell inside the table is selected.

Edit a Table in Excel: Every Action That Works

Once your data is in a table, here are the exact steps for every editing action you’ll need. For full guidance on resizing, Microsoft’s official table-editing documentation covers the detailed workflow.

Action How To Do It Notes
Resize the table Click anywhere in the table, open Table Design > Resize Table, then select the new full cell range Start with the upper‑left cell of the intended range
Add rows automatically Type directly in the cell below the last table row or paste data there Excel expands the table to include the new data
Add columns automatically Type in the cell to the right of the last table column or paste data there Same behavior as adding rows
Insert rows manually Right‑click a non‑header cell, hover Insert, choose Table Rows Above Gives you exact placement control
Insert columns manually Right‑click a non‑header cell, hover Insert, choose Table Columns to the Left Same logic as the row insert
Delete rows Home > Delete > Delete Table Rows Using the Delete key only clears cell contents
Delete columns Home > Delete > Delete Table Columns Removes the column and shrinks the table
Remove duplicates Table Design > Tools > Remove Duplicates, then pick which columns to check Only available after data is formatted as a table
Filter blanks Click the column‑header filter arrow, clear (Select All), then select (Blanks) Fast way to surface empty cells

How Do You Add or Remove Rows and Columns?

Adding or removing rows and columns is the most common table edit, and Excel gives you two ways to do it — automatic and manual.

The automatic method is the simplest. Type anything into the cell immediately below the last row of the table, and Excel adds that row to the table for you. The same rule applies to the column to the right of the table’s last column — type or paste data there and the table expands sideways.

For precise placement, use the manual route. Right-click any non-header cell inside the table, hover over Insert, and pick Table Rows Above or Table Columns to the Left. This inserts exactly where you need it.

To delete, select a cell in the row or column you want to remove, then go to Home > Delete and choose Delete Table Rows or Delete Table Columns. The table shrinks to match automatically.

Removing Duplicates and Filtering Blanks

Duplicates and blank cells are the two problems people encounter most often in Excel tables, and both clean up quickly with built-in tools.

To remove duplicates, click anywhere inside the table, open the Table Design tab, and select Remove Duplicates in the Tools group. Choose which columns to check for matching values — select all or just the ones that matter — and click OK. Excel removes the duplicate rows and reports how many were found.

To filter for blank cells, click the filter arrow in the column header, clear the (Select All) checkbox, scroll to the bottom of the list, and select (Blanks). The table shows only rows where that column is empty. Clear the filter to bring everything back.

Common Mistakes When Editing Excel Tables

Knowing what can go wrong saves more time than knowing the shortcuts. Here are the most frequent missteps and how to fix them.

Mistake Why It’s a Problem The Fix
Editing a regular range instead of a table Table Design and Resize Table won’t appear Format the data as a table first using Home > Format as Table
Forgetting to include headers when creating a table Excel treats the header row as regular data Check the My table has headers box in the Create Table dialog
Pasting new data in the wrong place The table won’t expand if you paste too far away Paste directly below the last row or to the right of the last column
Confusing tables with PivotTables PivotTables have their own editing tools on the Analyze tab Use PivotTable Analyze for PivotTable source data, not Table Design
Using the Delete key instead of Home > Delete Table Rows The Delete key clears contents but doesn’t remove the row from the table Use Home > Delete > Delete Table Rows to shrink the table

Quick Reference for Common Table Edits

When you just need the answer fast, here’s every editing move in one place.

  • Resize: Table Design > Resize Table, then select the new range.
  • Add data quickly: Type or paste directly below the last row or to the right of the last column.
  • Insert exactly where needed: Right‑click > Insert > Table Rows Above or Table Columns to the Left.
  • Delete rows or columns: Home > Delete > Delete Table Rows or Delete Table Columns.
  • Remove duplicates: Table Design > Remove Duplicates.
  • Filter blank cells: Column filter arrow > clear all > select (Blanks).
  • Don’t confuse tables with PivotTables: They use different tabs and tools.

All of these actions require data formatted as an Excel table first. Once it is, the Table Design tab becomes the one place for every edit.

References & Sources