Google Sheets to image
Turn a Google Sheets range into a PNG
Copy cells from Google Sheets and paste them directly, or open a downloaded Sheet. Select the useful range and export a polished image.
Paste cells or drop a downloaded Sheet
Copied cells, .xlsx, .csv, or .tsv
Free · no sign-up · processed on your device
The fastest way to turn Google Sheets cells into an image is to copy the table and paste it into a browser-based table renderer. Celtrim converts the pasted grid into a selectable range, then exports that range as a PNG with controlled padding, colors, and resolution.
How it works
01
Copy the cells
Select a range in Google Sheets, copy it, then choose Paste cells in Celtrim.
02
Check the range
Drag across the rows and columns you want in the final image.
03
Export the PNG
Choose a background, padding, and image scale, then download the result.
Built for sharing a range, not capturing a screen
- Export rows beyond the visible browser viewport without stitching screenshots together.
- Leave sheet tabs, browser controls, comments, and collaborator avatars out of the image.
- Use a transparent background when the table needs to sit on a colored slide or page.
- Keep the workflow private without granting access to your Google Drive account.
Common questions
- Can Google Sheets export selected cells as an image?
- Google Sheets does not provide a direct command for exporting an arbitrary cell range as PNG. You can copy the range into Celtrim, then select and download it as an image.
- Do I need to download the Google Sheet first?
- No. For a normal table, copy the cells in Google Sheets and paste them into Celtrim. Download the Sheet as .xlsx when you need to carry more workbook formatting into the image.
- Does Celtrim access my Google account?
- No. Celtrim does not connect to Google Drive or request account access. It only reads the cells you paste or the file you explicitly open.
- Can it export Google Sheets charts?
- Celtrim converts cell data, not chart objects. Use Google Sheets' chart download option for a chart, and Celtrim for the table or KPI cells behind it.