Excel formula if cell does not contain specific text

Let's say you want to ensure that a column contains text, not numbers. Or, perhapsyou want to find all orders that correspond to a specificsalesperson. If you have no concern for upper- or lowercase text, there are several ways to check if a cell contains text.

You can also use a filter to find text. For more information, see Filter data.

Find cells that contain text

Follow these steps to locate cells containing specific text:

  1. Select the range of cells that you want to search.

    To search the entire worksheet, click any cell.

  2. On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click Find & Select, and then click Find.

    Excel formula if cell does not contain specific text

  3. In the Find what box, enter the text—or numbers—that you need to find. Or, choose a recent search from the Find what drop-down box.

    Note:You can use wildcard characters in your search criteria.

  4. To specify a format for your search, click Format and make your selections in the Find Format popup window.

  5. Click Options to further define your search. For example, you can search for all of the cells that contain the same kind of data, such as formulas.

    In the Within box, you can select Sheet or Workbook to search a worksheet or an entire workbook.

  6. Click Find All or Find Next.

    Find All lists every occurrence of the item that you need to find,and allows you to make a cell active by selecting a specific occurrence. You can sort the results of a Find All search by clicking a header.

Note:To cancel a search in progress, press ESC.

Check if a cell has any text in it

To do this task, use the ISTEXT function.

Excel formula if cell does not contain specific text

Check if a cell matches specific text

Use the IF function to return results for the condition that you specify.

Excel formula if cell does not contain specific text

Check if part of a cell matches specific text

To do this task, use the IF, SEARCH, and ISNUMBER functions.

Note:The SEARCH function is case-insensitive.

Excel formula if cell does not contain specific text

In this example, the goal is to count cells that do not contain a specific substring. This problem can be solved with the COUNTIF function or the SUMPRODUCT function. Both approaches are explained below. Although COUNTIF is not case-sensitive, the SUMPRODUCT version of the formula can be adapted to perform a case-sensitive count. For convenience, data is the named range B5:B15.

COUNTIF function

The COUNTIF function counts cells in a range that meet supplied criteria. For example, to count the number of cells in a range that contain "apple" you can use COUNTIF like this:

=COUNTIF(range,"apple") // equal to "apple"

Note this is an exact match. To be included in the count, a cell must contain "apple" and only "apple". If a cell contains any other characters, it will not be counted. To reverse this operation and count cells that do not contain "apple", you can add the not equal to (<>) operator like this:

=COUNTIF(range,"<>apple") // not equal to "apple"

The goal in this example is to count cells that do not contain specific text, where the text is a substring that can be anywhere in the cell. To do this, we need to use the asterisk (*) character as a wildcard. To count cells that contain the substring "apple", we can use a formula like this:

=COUNTIF(range,"*apple*") // contains "apple"

The asterisk (*) wildcard matches zero or more characters of any kind, so this formula will count cells that contain "apple" anywhere in the cell. To count cells that do not contain the substring "apple", we add the not equal to (<>) operator like this:

=COUNTIF(range,"<>*apple*") // does not contain "apple"

The formulas used in the worksheet shown follow the same pattern:

=COUNTIF(data,"<>*a*") // does not contain "a" =COUNTIF(data,"<>*0*") // does not contain "0" =COUNTIF(data,"<>*-r*") // does not contain "-r"

Data is the named range B5:B15. The COUNTIF function supports three different wildcards, see this page for more details.

Note the COUNTIF formula above won't work if you are targeting a particular number and cells contain numeric data. This is because the wildcard automatically causes COUNTIF to look for text only (i.e. to look for "2" instead of just 2). In addition, COUNTIF is not case-sensitive, so you can't perform a case-sensitive count. The SUMPRODUCT alternative explained below can handle both situations.

With a cell reference

You can easily adjust this formula to use a cell reference in criteria. For example, if A1 contains the substring you want to exclude from the count, you can use a formula like this:

=COUNTIF(range,"<>*"&A1&"*")

Inside COUNTIF, the two asterisks and the not equal to operator (<>) are concatenated to the value in A1, and the formula works as before.

Exclude blanks

To exclude blank cells, you can switch to COUNTIFS  function and add another condition like this:

=COUNTIFS(range,"<>*a*",range,"?*") // requires some text

The second condition means "at least one character".

See also: 50 examples of formula criteria

SUMPRODUCT function

Another way to solve this problem is with the SUMPRODUCT function and Boolean algebra. This approach has the benefit of being case-sensitive if needed. In addition, you can use this technique to target a number inside of a number, something you can't do with COUNTIF.

To count cells that contain specific text with SUMPRODUCT, you can use the SEARCH function. SEARCH returns the position of text in a text string as a number. For example, the formula below returns 6 since the "a" appears first as the sixth character in the string:

=SEARCH( "a","The cat sat") // returns 6

If the text is not found, SEARCH returns a #VALUE! error:

=SEARCH( "x","The cat sat") // returns #VALUE!

Notice we do not need to use any wildcards because SEARCH will automatically find substrings. If we get a number from SEARCH, we know the substring was found. If we get an error, we know the substring was not found. This means we can add the ISNUMBER function to evaluate the result from SEARCH like this:

To reverse the operation, we add the NOT function:

We now have what we need to count cells that do not contain a substring with SUMPRODUCT. Back in the example worksheet, to count cells that do not contain "a" with SUMPRODUCT, you can use a formula like this

=SUMPRODUCT(--NOT(ISNUMBER(SEARCH("a",data))))

Working from the inside out, SEARCH is configured to look for "a":

Because data (B5:B15) contains 11 cells, the result from SEARCH is an array with 11 results:

{1;1;1;1;2;2;#VALUE!;#VALUE!;#VALUE!;#VALUE!;#VALUE!}

In this array, numbers indicate the position of "a" in cells where "a" is found. The #VALUE! errors indicate cells where "a" was not found. To convert these results into a simple array of TRUE and FALSE values, we use the ISNUMBER function:

ISNUMBER(SEARCH("a",data))

ISNUMBER returns TRUE for any number and FALSE for errors. SEARCH delivers the array of results to ISNUMBER, and ISNUMBER converts the results to an array that contains only TRUE and FALSE values:

{TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE}

In this array, TRUE corresponds to cells that contain "a" and FALSE corresponds to cells that do not contain "a". This is exactly the opposite of what we need, so we use the  NOT function to reverse the array:

NOT(ISNUMBER(SEARCH("a",data)))

The result from the  NOT function is:

{FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;FALSE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE;TRUE}

In this array, the TRUE values represent cells we want to count. However, we first need to convert the TRUE and FALSE values to their numeric equivalents, 1 and 0. To do this, we use a double negative (--):

--NOT(ISNUMBER(SEARCH("a",data)))

The result inside of SUMPRODUCT looks like this:

=SUMPRODUCT({0;0;0;0;0;0;1;1;1;1;1}) // returns 5

With a single array to process, SUMPRODUCT sums the array and returns 5 as a final result.

One benefit of this formula is it will find a number inside a numeric value. In addition, there is no need to use wildcards to indicate position, because SEARCH will automatically look through all text in a cell.

Case-sensitive option

For a case-sensitive count, you can replace the SEARCH function with the FIND function like this:

=SUMPRODUCT(--NOT(ISNUMBER(FIND("A",data))))

The FIND function works just like the SEARCH function, but is case-sensitive. Notice we have replaced "a" with "A" because FIND is case-sensitive. If we used "a", the result would be 11 since there are no cells in B5:B15 that contain a lowercase "a". This example provides more detail.

Note: the SUMPRODUCT formulas above are more complex, but using Boolean operations in array formulas is a more powerful and flexible approach. It is also an important skill in modern functions like FILTER and XLOOKUP, which often use this technique to select the right data. The syntax used by COUNTIF is unique to a group of eight functions and is therefore not as useful or portable.