The most comprehensive resource for financial bridge charts. Build professional waterfall charts for free in your browser, or learn the methodology used by top investment banks and FP&A teams.
A waterfall chart is a specialized tool for showing *movement*. Using it correctly clarifies your data; using it incorrectly confuses your audience.
Explaining the specific drivers between Budget and Actuals. Instead of just seeing a miss, you see that Price was up, but Volume was down.
Proving that A + B - C = D. Essential for cash reconciliations, inventory roll-forwards, and deferred revenue walks.
Showing the journey from Entry Valuation to Exit Valuation in private equity, highlighting debt paydown and EBITDA growth.
Do not use waterfalls to compare Revenue across 5 different regions. Use a Grouped Bar Chart instead.
To show revenue growth over 12 months, a Line Chart is cleaner and easier to read than 12 floating bars.
Trying to show how marketing spend affects sales? Use a Scatter Plot. Waterfalls imply summation, not correlation.
Creating a waterfall chart is easy. Creating one that tells a clear story requires following these 6 best practices.
Executives don't read pennies. Convert $14,231,098 to $14.2M. Always ensure your "plug" variance absorbs the rounding error so the chart foots perfectly.
Avoid the "picket fence" effect of too many small bars. Use the Pareto Principle: Plot the top 5 drivers individually, and group the rest into a single bar labeled "Other".
Green for favorable impact (High Revenue, Low Cost). Red for unfavorable (Low Revenue, High Cost). Blue/Grey for anchors (Start, End, Subtotals).
Group related drivers together. If you have 3 positive revenue drivers and 2 negative cost drivers, keep them grouped rather than alternating up/down/up/down, which is hard to follow.
If you have a long "waterfall" drop, break it up with subtotals like "Gross Margin" or "Operating Profit". This gives the eye a resting place and adds context.
For multi-national companies, always isolate Currency (FX) impact into its own bar. Do not bury it inside price or volume, or it will distort the view of operational performance.
Professionally designed templates. Click any card to open the tool with pre-loaded data.
The classic P&L walkdown. This template takes you from Top Line Revenue down to Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It uses subtotals for Gross Profit to show margins.
The standard FP&A Variance analysis. It starts with the Budgeted number, then adds columns for Volume, Price, Mix, and FX impact to explain exactly how you arrived at the Actual result.
A visualization of the Statement of Cash Flows. Starts with Beginning Cash, adds Operating Cash Flow, subtracts Investing (CapEx), adds Financing, and ends at Closing Cash.
A detailed manufacturing cost walk. Starts with Raw Materials, adds Direct Labor, Variable Overhead, Fixed Overhead, and Freight to arrive at the Total Cost of Goods Sold.
Critical for subscription businesses. Starts with Opening ARR, adds New Sales and Expansion revenue, then subtracts Contraction and Churn to show Net Growth for the period.
Standard accounting reconciliation for physical goods. Starts with Opening Balance, adds Purchases, subtracts Cost of Goods Sold and Write-offs to prove the Closing Balance.
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