
=SUMIF(range,"text*",sum_range)
Related formulas
Sum if cells contain specific text
Sum if not blank
Sum if cells are equal to
Sum if cells are not equal to
Sum if equal to either x or y
To sum cells if other cells begin with a specific value, you can use the SUMIF function.
In the example shown, cell G6 contains this formula:
=SUMIF(C5:C11,"t-shirt*",D5:D11)
This formula sums the amounts in column D when a value in column C begins with "t-shirt". Note that SUMIF is not case-sensitive.
The SUMIF function supports wildcards. An asterisk (*) means "one or more characters", while a question mark (?) means "any one character".
These wildcards allow you to create criteria such as "begins with", "ends with", "contains 3 characters" and so on.
To match all items that begin with "T-shirt", the criteria is "t-shirt*". Note that you must enclose literal text and the wildcard in double quotes ("").
You can also use the SUMIFS function to sum if cells begin with. SUMIFS can handle multiple criteria, and the order of the arguments is different from SUMIF. The equivalent SUMIFS formula is:
=SUMIFS(D5:D11,C5:C11,"t-shirt*")
Notice that the sum range always comes first in the SUMIFS function.

=SUMIF(range,"text*",sum_range)
Related formulas
Sum if cells contain specific text
Sum if not blank
Sum if cells are equal to
Sum if cells are not equal to
Sum if equal to either x or y
To sum cells if other cells begin with a specific value, you can use the SUMIF function.
In the example shown, cell G6 contains this formula:
=SUMIF(C5:C11,"t-shirt*",D5:D11)
This formula sums the amounts in column D when a value in column C begins with "t-shirt". Note that SUMIF is not case-sensitive.
The SUMIF function supports wildcards. An asterisk (*) means "one or more characters", while a question mark (?) means "any one character".
These wildcards allow you to create criteria such as "begins with", "ends with", "contains 3 characters" and so on.
To match all items that begin with "T-shirt", the criteria is "t-shirt*". Note that you must enclose literal text and the wildcard in double quotes ("").
You can also use the SUMIFS function to sum if cells begin with. SUMIFS can handle multiple criteria, and the order of the arguments is different from SUMIF. The equivalent SUMIFS formula is:
=SUMIFS(D5:D11,C5:C11,"t-shirt*")
Notice that the sum range always comes first in the SUMIFS function.