Use Case Guide

Pie Chart for Social Media

Design scroll-stopping pie charts for your social media posts, stories, and data-driven 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
Pro
Pro

Go Pro — $7.99

No watermark, transparent BG, hi-res 2x, premium palettes

Free exports include a small "Made with piechartgenerator.com" watermark. Go Pro for $7.99

When to Use This Type of Pie Chart

Data-driven content performs exceptionally well on social media. Pie charts are compact, visually striking, and immediately understandable, making them perfect for grabbing attention in crowded feeds and driving engagement with your posts.

Sharing industry statistics and insights

Turn an interesting stat from a report or study into a pie chart graphic that educates your audience and positions your brand as a thought leader.

Reporting campaign results

Show your audience or clients how marketing spend, leads, or engagement was distributed across channels using a clean, branded pie chart.

Creating poll and survey result graphics

Ran a poll on LinkedIn or Instagram Stories? Share the results as a designed pie chart to maximize visibility and re-engagement.

Best Practices
  • Use bold, high-contrast colors that stand out on mobile screens in light and dark modes.
  • Design at a 1:1 aspect ratio (square) for optimal display on Instagram and LinkedIn feeds.
  • Keep text large and minimal. Your chart should be readable on a phone screen.
  • Include your brand logo or handle as a subtle watermark for attribution when the chart is shared.
  • Add a compelling headline above the chart to give context and stop the scroll.
  • Test the chart at thumbnail size to ensure it remains legible in feeds.

Frequently Asked Questions