How to Merge Multiple CSV Files in Excel (Step-by-Step Guide)

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Have a bunch of CSV files in a folder and want to merge or combine them to one big file? Follow these simple instructions to combine multiple CSV files in to one spreadssheet using Microsoft Excel (2016 or above).

What you need?

  • A folder with CSV files (click here to download sample files, if you need some)
  • Microsoft Excel (2016 or above version)
folder of CSV files we want to merge

Method 1: Merge CSV Files using Power Query (Recommended)

This is by far the easiest and quickest way to combine data from CSV files in a folder using Excel.

Follow these steps:

  1. Close any opened CSV files: Before proceeding, close any of the opened CSV files. Make a note of the folder path too.
  2. Open Excel and make a new file: This will be our merged CSV data file. Here, we will setup Power Query to combine all the files.
  3. Go to Data Ribbon > Get Data and click on From Folder
Get data from folder option in Excel Power Query

Paste the folder path or navigate to the folder and click “select”.

  1. For simple CSV files: If your CSVs are already clean and you just want to merge them, select the Combine > Combine & Load option.
  2. For complex CSVs or if you need to clean-up data before merge: Select the Combine > Combine & Transform Data option. This will open up “Power Query Editor” so you can clean up data or apply “transformations”.
Combine & Load options in Excel Folder Merge

  1. Click “OK” in the next screen: This next screen shows a sample of your data (usually the first file) so you can confirm to Excel how your data looks. If your delimiter is not comma (for example, you have TSV files instead of CSV), you can also tell Excel about that using this screen.
Use this screen to tell Excel about your file and delimiter structure.
  1. If you selected “Combine & Load” option: Your merge is done! The combined data from your CSV files is now loaded into Excel. This is how it will look (see below). You can use the “Source name” column to figure out which file each row came from.
Example merged CSV files in Excel

For “Advanced” Merge Scenarios – Combine & Transform Data

If your CSV files are not so simple or you want to further clean-up data after merging, you can follow these steps.

Select the “Combine & Transform Data” option in after Step 3 (ie once you point the folder). This will take you to Power Query editor (after you confirm the file details, as shown in step 6 above).

Once you are in Power Query Editor screen, you can apply any data clean-up and transformation steps on your data easily. I will share a few examples below. But refer to my Power Query tutorial page or video for detailed information on how to use Power Query for data cleaning and transformations.

Example 1: Removing the “Total” column from merged CSV files

Let’s say you don’t want the “total” column from these merged budget files. In the Power Query editor, right click on the “total” column and select “remove”. This will remove the total budget column. Don’t worry, it is not going to remove data from original CSV files. But when you merge the data, you won’t just see the “total” column.

Removing unwanted columns in merged CSV Data

Example 2: Reshaping the 12 columns to month & value column structure

While the 12 monthly column structure works best for gathering budget data, it may not be ideal for data analysis. So let’s reshape our merged data to a format like this:

  • File name
  • Budget Category
  • Month
  • Budget value

Essentially, each row of the data in original CSV file becomes 12 rows in merged file. This process is caleld “unpivoting”. It looks like this:

how unpivoting works - illustration

To unpivot data in Power Query Editor:

  1. Select the file name & cost category columns (and any other columns you want to retain).
  2. Tip: You can hold Shift or CTRL to multi-select columns in Power Query Editor.
  3. Right click on the selected columns and select “Unpivot other columns” option.
Unpivoting budget data in the merged CSV files

This will replace the 12 monthly columns with a new “Attribute” and “Value” columns. These are nothing but our Month and Budget columns!

After unpivot - much better combined CSV file

Renaming the columns: You can double click on the column header and rename it to Month and Budget.

Load combined CSV data to Excel:

When you finish the data clean up and transformations you want to do, go to the Home ribbon in Power Query editor and click on “Close & Load” to bring the finalized data to Excel.

How to load merged or combined data to Excel

Why this method is the best?

I have been using (and advocating) Power Query for more than 10 years. I can’t tell you how much time and effort this little trick has saved me. Here are my top reasons for why Power Query is the best way to merge CSV files.

  • Fully Dynamic: You don’t need to worry about changing files or growing (or even shrinking) data. Once you properly set up the Power Query connection, your data will be merged automatically even if there are 1000s of files.
  • Automated: One of the biggest challenges with data merges like this is that your raw data files change often. With Power Query, updating the “merged” dataset is really simple. Open the merged file, right click anywhere on the merged data table and select “Refresh” to automatically update the merged CSV data.
Refreshing or updating merged CSV data when the folder changes or you have new files
  • Works even if the columns are out of order*: This method works just as perfectly even if your CSV files have columns in jumbled order, as long as the column headings are same across files. That means if file 1 has “Cost category” as column 1 and file 3 has “Cost category” as column 14, the merge still works, as the column heading is matching in both cases. I talk about how to deal with more complex situations of mismatched headers in this video.

Other ways to combine or merge CSV files with Excel

We can also use below techniques to merge CSV files with Excel (I prefer Power Query btw).

  • Using VBA Macros to combine CSV files: Excel’s own coding language – VBA offers a powerful and proven way to combine multiple files (CSV, Text or even other Excel files) and get merged data in one place. This is an advanced method and not really recommended for beginners. Refer to this article for a detailed step-by-step instruction on how to combine data with Excel VBA
  • Manual Copy Pasting: For something quick and dirty, you can also manually open the CSV files and copy paste the data into master Excel file. This is an error-prone and labor intensive process and should only be used in one-off cases.
  • Command Line Utilities: As CSVs are just text files, you can also use a simple command line utility to combine multiple CSVs to one file. This has the disadvantage of repeating headers and not working when the headers don’t match up or columns don’t align. Here is the command for Windows. This combines the CSV files in the sub-folder “merge csv” to a new file named “combined_file.csv”.
copy /b "merge csv"\*.csv combined_file.csv
DOS command to merge CSV files
  • Using online tools: Plenty of online tools offer CSV merge functionality. You can upload your files on these websites and they will combine them for you. I suggest checking the privacy policies of these websites and using them only if you can’t apply Power Query or VBA or manual methods. Here are a few that offer this service: MergeCSV, CSV Combiner

Best Practices when Merging CSV Files (with PQ in Excel):

  • Columns should match (need not be in same order): The merge options in Power Query work best if your columns match, even if they are out of order across files.
  • Keep the folder clean: By default, Power Query is going to combine all the files in the folder you point to. So keep the folder clean and tight. Don’t copy or create files in the folder that you don’t want to merge.
  • Close files before refresh: Power Query refresh can fail or miss the files if you keep them open when updating the query. So close everything before you hit refresh.
  • Data Format Issues (especially with Dates): If you have CSVs containing dates and these files use different date formats, the merged file can be a mess and throw date formatting issues. Synchronize date and currency formats across files before merging them to avoid such data format issues.

In conclusion – Use Power Query to Merge your CSVs

Excel’s own Power Query offers a superior, easy and automatic way to combine CSV files. It works beautifully even when combining 1000s of files. For a recent client project, I combined 340 different budget files with Excel Power Query in under 10 minutes. Needless to say, the client’s jaw dropped when they saw the demo!

But for whatever reason, you can’t use Power Query, try either VBA or command line utilities or one of the online CSV combine options.

Bonus: Sample Files & CSV Combine Template

If you need a hand with combining CSV files, download my sample data files and CSV combiner template using below links. Unzip the files and adjust folder path in Power Query (source step of the merged query) to make it work with your computer’s path.

Resources on Power Query

If you want to learn a bit more about what Power Query can do for your data problems, check out below resources:

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8 Responses to “Pivot Tables from large data-sets – 5 examples”

  1. Ron S says:

    Do you have links to any sites that can provide free, large, test data sets. Both large in diversity and large in total number of rows.

    • Chandoo says:

      Good question Ron. I suggest checking out kaggle.com, data.world or create your own with randbetween(). You can also get a complex business data-set from Microsoft Power BI website. It is contoso retail data.

  2. Steve J says:

    Hi Chandoo,
    I work with large data sets all the time (80-200MB files with 100Ks of rows and 20-40 columns) and I've taken a few steps to reduce the size (20-60MB) so they can better shared and work more quickly. These steps include: creating custom calculations in the pivot instead of having additional data columns, deleting the data tab and saving as an xlsb. I've even tried indexmatch instead of vlookup--although I'm not sure that saved much. Are there any other tricks to further reduce the file size? thanks, Steve

    • Chandoo says:

      Hi Steve,

      Good tips on how to reduce the file size and / or process time. Another thing I would definitely try is to use Data Model to load the data rather than keep it in the file. You would be,
      1. connect to source data file thru Power Query
      2. filter away any columns / rows that are not needed
      3. load the data to model
      4. make pivots from it

      This would reduce the file size while providing all the answers you need.

      Give it a try. See this video for some help - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u7bpysO3FQ

  3. John Price says:

    Normally when Excel processes data it utilizes all four cores on a processor. Is it true that Excel reduces to only using two cores When calculating tables? Same issue if there were two cores present, it would reduce to one in a table?
    I ask because, I have personally noticed when i use tables the data is much slower than if I would have filtered it. I like tables for obvious reasons when working with datasets. Is this true.

    • Ron MVP says:

      John:
      I don't know if it is true that Excel Table processing only uses 2 threads/cores, but it is entirely possible. The program has to be enabled to handle multiple parallel threads. Excel Lists/Tables were added long ago, at a time when 2 processes was a reasonable upper limit. And, it could be that there simply is no way to program table processing to use more than 2 threads at a time...

  4. Jen says:

    When I've got a large data set, I will set my Excel priority to High thru Task Manager to allow it to use more available processing. Never use RealTime priority or you're completely locked up until Excel finishes.

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