Use Case Guide

Pie Chart for Infographics

Create bold, attention-grabbing pie charts designed to shine in infographics, blog posts, and visual content.

Enter Your Data

Pre-filled with sample data

Label
Value
%
30.0%
25.0%
20.0%
15.0%
10.0%
Live preview active
Total: 100
Data Summary
5 items

Total Value

100

Categories

Manual: Add categories one by one with custom colors

Paste: Copy from Excel or Google Sheets (Label, Value format)

CSV: Upload any CSV file with your data

Chart Preview

Export to PNG, SVG, PDF

Live Preview
My Pie Chart Data
CategoryValuePercentage
Category A3030.0%
Category B2525.0%
Category C2020.0%
Category D1515.0%
Category E1010.0%

Categories

5

Total Value

100

Chart Type

pie

Chart Settings

0°

Export Chart

Includes watermark
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When to Use This Type of Pie Chart

Infographics are all about communicating data visually, and pie charts are one of the most recognizable chart types. A well-designed pie chart can become the centerpiece of your infographic, instantly communicating a key statistic that draws readers in.

Hero statistics in marketing infographics

Use a large, boldly colored pie chart as the focal point of your infographic to highlight a surprising or compelling data point that supports your narrative.

Blog post data visuals

Break up text-heavy blog content with a pie chart that summarizes key findings, survey results, or industry statistics to increase reader engagement.

Social media data graphics

Create shareable data visuals for platforms like LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Pie charts are compact enough to be readable even on mobile screens.

Email newsletter content

Add a pie chart to your email newsletters to visually support your key message and increase click-through rates on data-driven content.

Best Practices
  • Use bold, saturated colors that pop against both light and dark infographic backgrounds.
  • Make the chart large enough to be easily readable at social media thumbnail sizes.
  • Keep labels short, using 1-3 words per category for a clean, uncluttered look.
  • Use a donut variation (hollow center) to add a key statistic in the middle for extra impact.
  • Ensure sufficient color contrast between adjacent slices for readability.

Frequently Asked Questions