How to conditionally format dates and time in Excel with formulas and inbuilt rules

If you are a regular visitor of this blog, you've probably noticed a few articles covering different aspects of Excel conditional formatting. And now we will leverage this knowledge and create spreadsheets that differentiate between weekdays and weekends, highlight public holidays and display a coming deadline or delay. In other words, we are going to apply Excel conditional formatting to dates.

If you have some basic knowledge of Excel formulas, then you are most likely familiar with some of date and time functions such as NOW, TODAY, DATE, WEEKDAY, etc. In this tutorial, we are going to take this functionality a step further to conditionally format Excel dates in the way you want.

Excel conditional formatting for dates (built-in rules)

Microsoft Excel provides 10 options to format selected cells based on the current date.

  1. To apply the formatting, you simply go to the Home tab > Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cell Rules and select A Date Occurring.
    Excel conditional formatting built-in rules for dates
  2. Select one of the date options from the drop-down list in the left-hand part of the window, ranging from last month to next month.
  3. Finally, choose one of the pre-defined formats or set up your custom format by choosing different options on the Font, Border and Fill tabs. If the Excel standard palette does not suffice, you can always click the More colors… button.
    Choose one of the pre-defined formats or set up your custom format.
  4. Click OK and enjoy the result! : )
    Highlight cells in Excel with dates occurring in the last 7 days.

However, this fast and straightforward way has two significant limitations - 1) it works for selected cells only and 2) the conditional format is always applied based on the current date.

Excel conditional formatting formulas for dates

If you want to highlight cells or entire rows based on a date in another cell, or create rules for greater time intervals (i.e. more than a month from the current date), you will have to create your own conditional formatting rule based on a formula. Below you will find a few examples of my favorite Excel conditional formats for dates.

How to highlight weekends in Excel

Regrettably, Microsoft Excel does not have a built-in calendar similar to Outlook's. Well, let's see how you can create your own automated calendar with quite little effort.

When designing your Excel calendar, you can use the =DATE(year,month,date) function to display the days of the week. Simply enter the year and the month's number somewhere in your spreadsheet and reference those cells in the formula. Of course, you could type the numbers directly in the formula, but this is not a very efficient approach because you would have to adjust the formula for each month.

The screenshot below demonstrates the DATE function in action. I used the formula =DATE($B$2,$B$1,B$4) which is copied across row 5.
Use Excel DATE function to display the days of the week.

Tip. If you want to display only the days of the week like you see in the image above, select the cells with the formula (row 5 in our case), right-click and choose Format Cells…> Number > Custom. From the drop-down list under Type, select either dddd or ddd to show full day names or abbreviated names, respectively.

Your Excel calendar is almost done, and you only need to change the color of weekends. Naturally, you are not going to color the cells manually. We'll have Excel format the weekends automatically by creating a conditional formatting rule based on the WEEKDAY formula.

  1. You start by selecting your Excel calendar where you want to shade the weekends. In our case, it is the range $B$4:$AE$10. Be sure to start the selection with the 1st date column - Colum B in this example.
  2. On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting menu > New Rule.
  3. Create a new conditional formatting rule based on a formula as explained in the above linked guide.
  4. In the "Format values where this formula is true" box, enter the following WEEKDAY formula that will determine which cells are Saturdays and Sundays: =WEEKDAY(B$5,2)>5
  5. Click the Format… button and set up your custom format by switching between the Font, Border and Fill tabs and playing with different formatting options. When done, click the OK button to preview the rule.
    Excel conditional formatting rule with the WEEKDAY formula to highlight weekends.

Now, let me briefly explain the WEEKDAY(serial_number,[return_type]) formula so that you can quickly adjust it for your own spreadsheets.

  • The serial_number parameter represents the date you are trying to find. You enter a reference to your first cell with a date, B$5 in our case.
  • The [return_type] parameter determines the week type (square brackets imply it is optional). You enter 2 as the return type for a week starting from Monday (1) through Sunday (7). You can find the full list of available return types here.
  • Finally, you write >5 to highlight only Saturdays (6) and Sundays (7).

The screenshot below demonstrates the result in Excel 2013 - the weekends are highlighted in the reddish colour.
The weekends are highlighted in the reddish colour.

Tips:

  • If you have non-standard weekends in your company, e.g. Fridays and Saturdays, then you would need to tweak the formula so that it starts counting from Sunday (1) and highlight days 6 (Friday) and 7 (Saturday) - WEEKDAY(B$5,1)>5.
  • If you are creating a horizontal (landscape) calendar, use a relative column (without $) and absolute row (with $) in a cell reference because you should lock the reference of the row - in the above example it is row 5, so we entered B$5. But if you are designing a calendar in vertical orientation, you should do the opposite, i.e. use an absolute column and relative row, e.g. $B5 as you can see in the screenshot below:

Excel conditional formatting formula to highlight weekends in a vertical orientation calendar.

How to highlight holidays in Excel

To improve your Excel calendar further, you can shade public holidays as well. To do that, you will need to list the holidays you want to highlight in the same or some other spreadsheet.

For example, I've added the following holidays in column A ($A$14:$A$17). Of course, not all of them are real public holidays, but they will do for demonstration purposes : )
Add list of public holidays to a worksheet.

Again, you open Conditional Formatting > New Rule. In the case of holidays, you are going to use either MATCH or COUNTIF function:

  • =COUNTIF($A$14:$A$17,B$5)>0
  • =MATCH(B$5,$A$14:$A$17,0)

Note. If you have chosen a different color for holidays, you need to move the public holiday rule to the top of the rules list via Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules…

The following image shows the result in Excel 2013:
Conditional formatting formula to highlight holidays in Excel.

Conditionally format a cell when a value is changed to a date

It's not a big problem to conditionally format a cell when a date is added to that cell or any other cell in the same row as long as no other value type is allowed. In this case, you could simply use a formula to highlight non-blanks, as described in Excel conditional formulas for blanks and non-blanks. But what if those cells already have some values, e.g. text, and you want to change the background color when text is changed to a date?

The task may sound a bit intricate, but the solution is very simple.

  1. First off, you need to determine the format code of your date. Here are just a few examples:
    • D1: dd-mmm-yy or d-mmm-yy
    • D2: dd-mmm or d-mmm
    • D3: mmm-yy
    • D4: mm/dd/yy or m/d/yy or m/d/yy h:mm

    You can find the complete list of date codes in this article.

  2. Select a column where you want to change the color of cells or the entire table in case you want to highlight rows.
  3. And now create a conditional formatting rule using a formula similar to this one: =CELL("format",$A2)="D1". In the formula, A is the column with dates and D1 is the date format.

    If your table contains dates in 2 or more formats, then use the OR operator, e.g. =OR(cell("format", $A2)="D1", cell("format",$A2)="D2", cell("format", $A2)="D3")

    The screenshot below demonstrates the result of such conditional formatting rule for dates.
    A row is highlighted when text in column C is changed to a date.

How to highlight rows based on a certain date in a certain column

Suppose, you have a large Excel spreadsheet that contains two date columns (B and C). You want to highlight every row that has a certain date, say 13-May-14, in column C.

To apply Excel conditional formatting to a certain date, you need to find its numerical value first. As you probably know, Microsoft Excel stores dates as sequential serial numbers, starting from January 1, 1900. So, 1-Jan-1900 is stored as 1, 2-Jan-1900 is stored as 2… and 13-May-14 as 41772.

To find the date's number, right-click the cell, select Format Cells > Number and choose the General format. Write down the number you see and click Cancel because you do not really want to change the date's format.
Find the numerical value of a date.

That was actually the major part of the work and now you only need to create a conditional formatting rule for the entire table with this very simple formula: =$C2=41772. The formula implies that your table has headers and row 2 is your first row with data.

An alternative way is to use the DATEVALUE formula that converts the date to the number format is which it is stored, e.g. =$C2=DATEVALUE("5/13/2014")

Whichever formula you use, it will have the same effect:
Highlight every row based on a certain date in a certain column.

Conditionally format dates in Excel based on the current date

As you probably know Microsoft Excel provides the TODAY() functions for various calculations based on the current date. Here are just a few examples of how you can use it to conditionally format dates in Excel.

Example 1. Highlight dates equal to, greater than or less than today

To conditionally format cells or entire rows based on today's date, you use the TODAY function as follows:

Equal to today: =$B2=TODAY()

Greater than today: =$B2>TODAY()

Less than today: =$B2<TODAY()

The screenshot below demonstrates the above rules in action. Please note, at the moment of writing TODAY was 12-Jun-2014.
Excel formulas to highlight dates equal to, greater than or less than the current date.

Example 2. Conditionally format dates in Excel based on several conditions

In a similar fashion, you can use the TODAY function in combination with other Excel functions to handle more complex scenarios. For example, you may want your Excel conditional formatting date formula to color the Invoice column when the Delivery Date is equal to or greater than today BUT you want the formatting to disappear when you enter the invoice number.

For this task, you would need an additional column with the following formula (where E is your Delivery column and F the Invoice column):

=IF(E2>=TODAY(),IF(F2="", 1, 0), 0)

If the delivery date is greater than or equal to the current date and there is no number in the Invoice column, the formula returns 1, otherwise it's 0.

After that you create a simple conditional formatting rule for the Invoice column with the formula =$G2=1 where G is your additional column. Of course, you will be able to hide this column later.
Excel conditional formatting rule to highlight blank cells in the Invoice column when the Delivery Date is equal to or greater than today.

Example 3. Highlight upcoming dates and delays

Suppose you have a project schedule in Excel that lists tasks, their start dates and durations. What you want is to have the end date for each task calculated automatically. An additional challenge is that the formula should also consider the weekends. For example, if the starting date is 13-Jun-2014 and the number of days of work (Duration) is 2, the ending date should come as 17-Jun-2014, because 14-Jun and 15-Jun are Saturday and Sunday.

To do this, we will use the WORKDAY.INTL(start_date,days,[weekend],[holidays]) function, more precisely =WORKDAY.INTL(B2,C2,1).
The WORKDAY.INTL formula calculates the End Date for each task taking into account the weekends.

In the formula, we enter 1 as the 3rd parameter since it indicates Saturday and Sunday as holidays. You can use another value if your weekends are different, say, Fri and Sat. The full list of the weekend values is available here. Optionally, you can also use the 4th parameter [holidays], which is a set of dates (range of cells) that should be excluded from the working day calendar.

And finally, you may want to highlight rows depending on how far away the deadline is. For example, the conditional formatting rules based on the following 2 formulas highlight upcoming and recent end dates, respectively:

  • =AND($D2-TODAY()>=0,$D2-TODAY()<=7) - highlight all rows where the End Date (column D) is within the next 7 days. This formula is really handy when it comes to tracking upcoming expiration dates or payments.
  • =AND(TODAY()-$D2>=0,TODAY()-$D2<=7) - highlight all rows where the End Date (column D) is within the last 7 days. You can use this formula to track the latest overdue payments and other delays.

Excel conditional formatting rules to highlight upcoming dates and delays

Here are a few more formula examples that can be applied to the table above:

=$D2<TODAY() - highlights all passed dates (i.e. dates less than the current date). Can be used to format expired subscriptions, overdue payments etc.

=$D2>TODAY() - highlights all future dates (i.e. dates greater than the current date). You can use it to highlight upcoming events.

Of course, there can be infinite variations of the above formulas, depending on your particular task. For instance:

=$D2-TODAY()>=6 - highlights dates that occur in 6 or more days.

=$D2=TODAY()-14 - highlights dates occurring exactly 2 weeks ago.

How to highlight dates within a date range

If you have a long list of dates in your worksheet, you may also want to highlight the cells or rows that fall within a certain date range, i.e. highlight all dates that are between two given dates.

You can fulfil this task using the TODAY() function again. You will just have to construct a little bit more elaborate formulas as demonstrated in the examples below.

Formulas to highlight past dates

  • More than 30 days ago: =TODAY()-$A2>30
  • From 30 to 15 days ago, inclusive: =AND(TODAY()-$A2>=15, TODAY()-$A2<=30)
  • Less than 15 days ago: =AND(TODAY()-$A2>=1, TODAY()-$A2<15)

The current date and any future dates are not colored.
Formulas to highlight past dates in a certain date range

Formulas to highlight future dates

  • Will occur in more than 30 days from now: =$A2-TODAY()>30
  • In 30 to 15 days, inclusive: =AND($A2-TODAY()>=15, $A2-TODAY()<=30)
  • In less than 15 days: =AND($A2-TODAY()>=1, $A2-TODAY()<15)

The current date and any past dates are not colored.
Formulas to highlight future dates in a given date range

How to shade gaps and time intervals

In this last example, we are going to utilize yet another Excel date function - DATEDIF(start_date, end_date, interval). This function calculates the difference between two dates based on the specified interval. It differs from all other functions we've discussed in this tutorial in the way that it lets you ignore months or years and calculate the difference only between days or months, whichever you choose.

Don't see how this could work for you? Think about it in another way… Suppose you have a list of birthdays of your family members and friends. Would you like to know how many days there are until their next birthday? Moreover, how many days exactly are left until your wedding anniversary and other events you wouldn't want to miss? Easily!

The formula you need is this (where A is your Date column):

=DATEDIF(TODAY(), DATE((YEAR(TODAY())+1), MONTH($A2), DAY($A2)), "yd")

The "yd" interval type at the end of the formula is used to ignore years and calculate the difference between the days only. For the full list of available interval types, look here.

Tip. If you happen to forget or misplace that complex formula, you can use this simple one instead: =365-DATEDIF($A2,TODAY(),"yd"). It produces exactly the same results, just remember to replace 365 with 366 in leap years : )

And now let's create an Excel conditional formatting rule to shade different gaps in different colors. In this case, it makes more sense to utilize Excel Color Scales rather than create a separate rule for each period.

The screenshot below demonstrates the result in Excel - a gradient 3-color scale with tints from green to red through yellow.
The 3-color scale shades cells in different colors based on how many days are left until the event.

"Days Until Next Birthday" Excel Web App

We have created this Excel Web App to show you the above formula in action. Just enter your events in 1st column and change the corresponding dates in the 2nd column to experiment with the result.

If you are curious to know how to create such interactive Excel spreadsheets, check out this article on how to make web-based Excel spreadsheets.

Hopefully, at least one of the Excel conditional formats for dates discussed in this article has proven useful to you. If you are looking for a solution to some different task, you are most welcome to post a comment. Thank you for reading!

1237 comments

  1. I am needing to indicate whether a guests arrival date occurred within 7 days of their booking date. The data resides on two separate sheets (one sheet for the guest name and booking date and another worksheet for the guest name and arrival date.A yes/no answer or the actual # of days between the two dates would be amazing.

    • Nikki:
      Sheet 1 Cell A1 "Name" Heading
      Sheet 1 Cell B1 "BookDate" Heading
      Sheet 1 Cell A2 is the guest's name
      Sheet 1 Cell B2 is the booking date
      Sheet 2 Cell A1 "Name" Heading
      Sheet 2 Cell B1 "Arrival Date" Heading
      Sheet 2 Cell A2 is the guest's name
      Sheet 2 Cell B2 is the arrival date
      Sheet 2 Cell C2 =DATEDIF(Sheet1!B2,B2,"D")
      Sheet 2 Cell D2 =IF(C2<=7,"Yes","No")

  2. I have a spreadsheet with 2 columns of dates. Column A and column G. I need to conditionally format cells in column G that have dates within a certain number of days from the dates in column A. For example, if the date in column G is 0-2 days older than the date in column A, the cells need to be GREEN. If the dates in column G are between 2-4 days older than the dates in column A, they need to be YELLOW. If the dates in column G are 5 days or older than those in column A, they need to be RED.

    Can this be done?

  3. Hello, I think something is wrong with my excel. I used the exact format for the conditional formatting of a row based on a cell. Using the formula =$B2=43182 where all the columns are selected. I get highlights, but they don't match the date I wanted them for, which in this case is 3/23/2018. Some 3/23/2018 rows will be highlighted, others won't, and some wrong rows will be highlighted with different dates.

    I am trying to do a of multiple weeks of similar data. I want to highlight the different weeks so I can track when someone doesn't appear in latter weeks.

  4. I am trying to write an excel formula so a cell will turn red if due date is past due but if another cell is filled in before due date for it not to turn red.Is this possible? I will be transfering the formula to smartsheets to use in there too.

  5. This will work:
    Enter this into cell H5
    =IF(MONTH(I5)=MONTH(TODAY()),"Current Month","")
    Then in the Conditional Formatting window enter
    in first field: Cell Value is
    in second field choose is Equal to
    then in the third field enter ="Current Month".
    Then format the cell in the manner/pattern you want to display.

  6. I have a spreadsheet that I'm creating for a friend. They hire out various things and take multiple payments. I would like to highlight the cells net to the date when its the current month EG cell I5 has the date but i would like H5 to change colour when its in the current month the date is entered (DD,MM,YYYY). I'm pretty certain this is possible but every time i try i seem to get 1,1,1900 and it conditional formats to this date

    • This will work.
      Enter this into H5
      =IF(MONTH(I5)=MONTH(TODAY()),"Current Month","")
      Then in Conditional Formatting window enter
      Cell is equal to
      Then in second field choose Is Equal to
      Then in third field Enter ="Current Month"
      Then choose formatting of your choice

      • Thank you Doug that works great. Sorry for late reply

  7. Hello Svetlana,

    on your Example 3. Highlight upcoming dates and delays the duration there is based on total number of days.
    How about the duration is within a months, for example duration = 6 months. Should I need to convert the 6 months into days?

  8. Hello Svetlana,

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I have a question and not sure if you can help me. I am managing a project and have a very simple Gantt chart created to track the project. Is there a way to add a daily tracker, of the current date in excel, that moves horizontally along the Gantt chart to see where we are at today (progress bar)? If you send me your email address, I can send you the spreadsheet or a screenshot. Thank you very much for any help.

  9. Hello,
    I have a simple excel sheet that lists 2 columns - the first has names of instructors with the second listing the date when training was last completed. I want the oldest date out of all those listed to show up in red and all others to show up green. The dates are in dd/mm/yyyy format. What's the easiest way to implement that conditional formatting?
    Thanks!

  10. I have a spreadsheet where dates in once cell (next order due) are calculated from a formula based on a date in a different cell (date order received). However, I want next order due dates that I have entered manually to appear in red so I know the date was not calculated from a formula. This way, I remember to update them manually when a new order is received. I pray that you can help me. :)

  11. I am looking to create a rule that highlights cells in a single column. These cell would be date equal to or less than today's date. I need to make this continual for everyday updates.

    Thanks in advance.

  12. Hello!

    I hope someone can help me. I have excel file consisting our product inventory. I hope conditional formatting can help me manage our product expiry. For example, at June 17, 2018 our X product will expire, I want the cell to highlight 3 or 4 months before the said expiry date. This will help me lot. Thanks.

  13. Hi Irina;
    Assume I created all 31 columns and conditional format to highlight weekend and holidays.
    I wonder if or how can I lock those weekend and holidays columns ( what I mean is no entries allowed below that columns).
    Thanks

  14. Hi;
    I hope someone can help me on an attendance sheet which there are 31 columns for 31 days in a month (ex: january).
    I want to know if columns that contain " Sat" and " Sun" or " Holiday" will be locked and no entries allowed.

    Which formula or conditional format or VBA to use that command. Thanks

  15. Thanks you for details formatting concept explained.

  16. =AND(TODAY()>=$E$2,TODAY()30 days from target AND <the target date. (dates in serial format in my case).

  17. Dear all,

    I would like to highlight the dates of the contracts that will end up in the future 90 days... But I don't know how to do it. I have tried so many things but nothing seems to work.

    Can you please help me to fix that?

    Best

  18. I am trying to change a color code in column A based on the date in column E. Currently I am only able to apply the change of color in column E itself but I would need to change the different colors in column A based on a booking system so I basically like to reset all cells in column A with the color blue and orange to color green every single day to show that they are available to be booked again. Is there any way to do this?? Any thoughts much appreciated!

  19. I am using the following formula:
    =IF(L15="","",IF(ISNA(L15),NA(),L15-TODAY()&" Days Remaining"))
    to determine how many days remaining until the next service of plant & equipment (working on a 6 monthly cycle)
    And then when applying conditional formatting I am using:
    When Cell Value is greater than =30&"Days Remaining" turn green & When Cell Value is less than =30&"Days Remaining" turn red.
    But when the cell is showing 1 - 9 days remaining it turns to green rather than red. How do I fix this?

  20. Hi anyone please help me how calculate expiry date.

    For Ex :- Training start date 11-Jan-17 and training end Date 15-Jan-17.

    What will be training expiry Date after 3 years in formula.

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