Use Case Guide

Pie Chart for Survey Results

Transform raw survey data into beautiful pie charts that clearly communicate your findings to any audience.

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

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When to Use This Type of Pie Chart

Surveys generate data that is inherently proportional, making pie charts a natural fit. Whether you are reporting on customer satisfaction, employee engagement, or public opinion, a pie chart helps your audience instantly see how responses are distributed.

Single-choice question results

When respondents pick one option from a list, pie charts perfectly show the proportion of each answer relative to the total number of responses.

Customer feedback summaries

Summarize NPS scores, satisfaction ratings, or product feedback in a visual format that stakeholders can understand at a glance during review meetings.

Academic or market research findings

Present the distribution of responses from your research study in papers, reports, or conference slides with a clean, well-labeled pie chart.

Best Practices
  • Use a color gradient from green to red when displaying satisfaction or sentiment data for intuitive reading.
  • Always display the total number of respondents alongside the chart for context.
  • Combine very small response categories into an 'Other' slice to keep the chart readable.
  • Include both the percentage and the raw count in labels when precision matters.
  • Order response categories logically, such as from most positive to most negative, rather than by size.
  • Add a brief annotation or callout to highlight the most important finding.

Frequently Asked Questions