Radar Chart Maker

TOOL

Add an axis for each category and enter a value — the chart updates as you type. Fill the area, then export PNG or SVG.

Data
Settings
Fill area

Free Radar Chart Maker

This radar chart maker turns a list of categories and values into a clean radar chart — also known as a spider chart or web chart — right in your browser. Add a row for each axis on the left, give it a label and a value, and the preview updates instantly with no account, no software, and no watermark on exports. The engine spaces your axes evenly around a shared center point, plots each value as a distance from the middle, and joins the points into a polygon whose overall shape tells the story at a glance. Radar charts shine when you want to compare a single item across several measures that share the same scale, such as a profile of ratings, scores, or attributes, where the polygon's balance or lopsidedness reveals strengths and gaps faster than a table of numbers. Toggle the Fill area option to switch between a solid translucent shape, which emphasizes the enclosed region, and a clean outline, which keeps overlapping or detailed charts readable. Aim for roughly three to eight axes so the labels stay legible and the polygon keeps a clear form. When the chart looks right, download a sharp 2× PNG for documents and slides, a scalable SVG for vector editing, copy it straight to your clipboard, or share a link that reopens the chart with your data intact.

How to Make a Radar Chart

1. Add your axes
Add a row for each category and give it a label and a value. Each row becomes one axis radiating from the center, so use at least three to form a closed shape.
2. Customize
Set a title and toggle Fill area on for a solid translucent shape or off for a clean outline that keeps detailed charts readable.
3. Export
Download as PNG or SVG, copy to the clipboard, or share a link that reopens the chart with your data.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a radar chart?
A radar chart, also called a spider or web chart, plots values on axes radiating from a center point. Each axis is a category, distance from the center is the value, and the points join into a polygon whose shape makes comparisons easy.
How many axes can a radar chart have?
Add one axis per row. Three is the practical minimum to form a shape, and most readable radar charts use three to about eight axes. More than that crowds the labels and the polygon.
When should I use a radar chart?
Use one to compare a single item across several measures on the same scale. It is best for showing overall shape or balance rather than reading precise values.

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