Excel.Tips.Net Welcome toExcel.Tips.Net

Helpful Links

Tips.Net Home
ExcelTips Home
Ask an Excel Question
Make a Comment

Tips.Net Store

ExcelTips FAQ
ExcelTips Premium

Learn Access Now
Free Printable Forms

Beauty Tips
Car Tips
Cleaning Tips
College Tips
Cooking Tips
Excel2007 Tips
ExcelTips
Family Tips
Gardening Tips
Health Tips
Home Tips
Legal Tips
Money Tips
Organizing Tips
Pest Tips
Pet Tips
Wedding Tips
Word2007 Tips
WordTips

Advertise on the
ExcelTips Site

Newest Tips

Converting to Octal

Filtering Columns for Unique Values

Printing Multiple Worksheets on a Single Page

Changing the Default Font

Creating a Drawing Object

Determining a Value of a Cell

Understanding Macros

 

Determining Business Quarters from Dates

Summary: Many businesses organize information according to calendar quarters, especially when it comes to fiscal information. Given a particular date, you may wonder how you can determine the quarter of the year in which that date falls. There are a number of ways you can devise formulas for such an answer. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003, and Excel 2007.)

Robert is looking for a way to determine the business quarter in which a particular date falls. For example, if cell A1 has 2/15/08, he would want cell B1 to contain a formula that returned Q1-08. Similarly, if cell A1 has 8/1/07, he would want cell B1 to return Q3-07.

There are literally dozens of ways that you can determine a straight business quarter from a date. A few of these methods are worth examining, and they are easily modified to adapt to any specific needs. What is assumed here is that you really want to use a self-contained formula, rather than using a lookup table or a VBA macro. Both of those approaches will work just fine, but it is assumed that the simple formulas will work best for your purposes.

The key factor in determining the business quarter is to look at the month of the date. One way to do that examination is to use a formula that relies on the CHOOSE function. Consider the following:

=CHOOSE(MONTH(A1),"Q1","Q1","Q1","Q2","Q2",
"Q2","Q3","Q3","Q3","Q4","Q4","Q4") & "-"
& RIGHT(YEAR(A1),2)

This is a single formula; it is rather long, providing a choice for each of the 12 months in the year. Each month returns the quarter portion of the result, and then the text for the year is appended.

Another way is to rely on IF statements to determine the quarter. This is done in the following manner:

=IF(MONTH(A1)<=3,"Q1",IF(MONTH(A1)<=6,"Q2",
IF(MONTH(A1)<=9,"Q3","Q4")))&"-"&TEXT(A1,"yy")

The IF statements check the month to see its relation to the various boundaries for the quarters (3, 6, and 9) and then assigns a proper quarter (Q1, Q2, Q3, or Q4) based on the result. A dash and the last two digits of the year is then appended to the quarter.

You can make the formula even shorter by calculating the quarter directly based upon the month. For instance, the following will take the month and return a value of 1 to 4 based on the month:

=INT((MONTH(A1)-1)/3)+1

This formula can be incorporated into a larger formula in this way:

="Q" & INT((MONTH(A1)-1)/3)+1 & "-" & RIGHT(YEAR(A1),2)

ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (3339) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

Your Data, Your Way! Want the greatest control possible over how your data appears on the page? Excel's custom formats can provide that control, and ExcelTips: Custom Formats can unlock the secrets to creating your own custom formats.
 
Check out ExcelTips: Custom Formats today!