Scatter Plot Maker

TOOL

Enter an X and a Y value for each point — the plot updates as you type. Label your axes, then export PNG or SVG.

Data
Settings
Show gridlines

Free Scatter Plot Maker

This scatter plot maker turns pairs of numbers into a clean XY chart right in your browser. Enter an X value and a Y value for each point in the rows on the left, and the preview updates instantly — no account, no software, and no watermark on exports. Every row becomes a single dot positioned by its coordinates, so you can see at a glance how two variables relate. Scatter plots are the go-to chart for spotting correlation, clusters, and outliers: a cloud of points that drifts upward from left to right hints at a positive relationship, a cloud that slopes downward hints at a negative one, and a shapeless spread suggests the two measures move independently. Label both axes so readers know exactly what each dimension represents, toggle the gridlines on or off to suit a busy or a minimal look, and give the plot a title. Negative numbers are fully supported on both axes, so points can land in any quadrant. When the plot looks right, download a sharp 2× PNG for documents and slides, a scalable SVG you can drop into a vector editor, copy it straight to your clipboard, or share a link that reopens the plot with your data intact.

How to Make a Scatter Plot

1. Enter your data
Add a row for each observation and type its X value and its Y value. Each pair plots as one dot, so add as many points as your dataset has.
2. Customize
Set a title, name the X-axis and Y-axis so each dimension is clear, and toggle gridlines on or off to match the look you want.
3. Export
Download as PNG or SVG, copy to the clipboard, or share a link that reopens the plot with your points.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I make a scatter plot?
Add a row for each point and enter its X value and Y value. Each pair becomes a dot and the preview updates as you type. Add at least two points, label your axes, then download as PNG or SVG.
What does a scatter plot show?
It shows how two numeric variables relate. An upward cloud of dots suggests positive correlation, a downward cloud suggests negative correlation, and a shapeless scatter suggests little or no relationship.
Can I plot negative values?
Yes. Both axes accept negative numbers and the plot positions each point correctly relative to zero, so points can sit in any quadrant.

Want the background first? Read the scatter plot guide, or browse every tool on the chart makers page.