Back to blog
4 min read

How to Get Excel-Like Shortcuts in Google Sheets

I recently moved from Investment Banking to Strategic Finance and one of the biggest annoyances was losing all the keyboard shortcuts that made me an Excel power user. Here are the two best ways to get them back.

J

Jake Bennatt

I work in google sheets and stuff. Built XLkeys to make my job easier. You should try it, its free.

I recently moved from Investment Banking to Strategic Finance and one of the biggest annoyances was moving to Google Sheets and losing all the keyboard shortcuts that made me an Excel power user. After searching for a bit, I found two primary ways to make Google Sheets feel very, very similar to Excel which I’ll explain below.

Tip #1: Enable Native Keyboard Shortcuts in Google Sheets

Google Sheets actually has a built-in compatibility mode that most people don’t know about. Here’s how to turn it on:

  • Open a new workbook and navigate to Help → Keyboard Shortcuts.
  • Turn on the button that says "Enable compatible spreadsheet shortcuts."

This will enable a very basic Excel-like feel for keyboard navigation of your spreadsheet, including:

  • F4 to lock formulas
  • Copy and paste
  • Fill down and fill over
  • Paste format and paste values
  • Insert rows and columns

This is a great starting point, but it only covers the basics. If you’re coming from a power-user workflow with Macabacus, Factset, or heavy Alt-key usage, you’ll want the next tip.

Tip #2: Download a Chrome Extension for 95% Excel Similarity

My favorite extension for this is XLKeys. It’s a super simple one-click install, free to use, and gives me all the shortcuts and formatting shortcuts I used to use with Macabacus and Factset in Excel. Including:

Make Google Sheets feel like Excel

Install XLKeys to use Excel-style shortcuts, Alt-key sequences, formula auditing, Goal Seek, and Sensitivity Tables in Google Sheets.

Add XLKeys to Chrome