Count cells less than

Generic formula 

=COUNTIF(rng,"<X")

Related formulas 

Count cells greater than

Explanation

To count the number of cells that contain values less than a particular number, you can use the COUNTIF function. In the generic form of the formula (above) rng represents a range of cells that contain numbers, and X represents the boundary below which you want to count.

In the example, the active cell contains this formula:

=COUNTIF(C4:C10,"<80")

How this formula works

COUNTIF counts the number of cells in the range that contain numeric values less than X and returns the result as a number.

If you want to count cells that are less than or equal to 80, use:

=COUNTIF(C4:C10,"<=80")

If you want to use a value in another cell as part of the criteria, use the ampersand (&) character to concatenate like this:

=COUNTIF(rng,"<"&a1)

If the value in cell a1 is "100", the criteria will be "<100"></100">

Count cells less than

Generic formula 

=COUNTIF(rng,"<X")

Related formulas 

Count cells greater than

Explanation

To count the number of cells that contain values less than a particular number, you can use the COUNTIF function. In the generic form of the formula (above) rng represents a range of cells that contain numbers, and X represents the boundary below which you want to count.

In the example, the active cell contains this formula:

=COUNTIF(C4:C10,"<80")

How this formula works

COUNTIF counts the number of cells in the range that contain numeric values less than X and returns the result as a number.

If you want to count cells that are less than or equal to 80, use:

=COUNTIF(C4:C10,"<=80")

If you want to use a value in another cell as part of the criteria, use the ampersand (&) character to concatenate like this:

=COUNTIF(rng,"<"&a1)

If the value in cell a1 is "100", the criteria will be "<100"></100">