Get started with Power BI Desktop

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Welcome to the getting started guide for Power BI Desktop. This tour shows you how Power BI Desktop works, what it can do, and how to build robust data models and amazing reports to amplify your business intelligence.

For a quick overview of how Power BI Desktop works and how to use it, you can scan the screens in this guide in just a few minutes. For a more thorough understanding, you can read through each section, perform the steps, and create your own Power BI Desktop file to post on the Power BI service and share with others.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing a sample work item.

You can also watch the Getting Started with the Power BI Desktop video, and download the Financial Sample Excel workbook to follow along with the video.

Important

You can get the most recent version of Power BI Desktop from the Windows Store, or as a single executable containing all supported languages that you download and install on your computer.

How Power BI Desktop works

With Power BI Desktop, you can:

  1. Connect to data, including multiple data sources.
  2. Shape the data with queries that build insightful, compelling data models.
  3. Use the data models to create visualizations and reports.
  4. Share your report files for others to leverage, build upon, and share. You can share Power BI Desktop .pbix files like any other files, but the most compelling method is to upload them to the Power BI service.

Power BI Desktop integrates proven Microsoft query engine, data modeling, and visualization technologies. Data analysts and others can create collections of queries, data connections, models, and reports, and easily share them with others. Through the combination of Power BI Desktop and the Power BI service, new insights from the world of data are easier to model, build, share, and extend.

Power BI Desktop centralizes, simplifies, and streamlines what can otherwise be a scattered, disconnected, and arduous process of designing and creating business intelligence repositories and reports. Ready to give it a try? Let's get started.

Install and run Power BI Desktop

To download Power BI Desktop, go to the Power BI Desktop download page and select Download Free. Or for download options, select See download or language options.

You can also download Power BI Desktop from the Power BI service. Select the Download icon in the top menu bar, and then select Power BI Desktop.

Screenshot of Power B I Service showing the download Power B I Desktop option.

On the Microsoft Store page, select Get, and follow the prompts to install Power BI Desktop on your computer. Start Power BI Desktop from the Windows Start menu or from the icon in the Windows taskbar.

The first time Power BI Desktop starts, it displays the Welcome screen.

From the Welcome screen, you can Get data, see Recent sources, open recent reports, Open other reports, or select other links. Select the close icon to close the Welcome screen.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Welcome screen.

Along the left side of Power BI Desktop are icons for the three Power BI Desktop views: Report, Data, and Model, from top to bottom. The current view is indicated by the yellow bar along the left, and you can change views by selecting any of the icons.

If you're using keyboard navigation, press Ctrl + F6 to move focus to that section of buttons in the window. To learn more about accessibility and Power BI, visit our accessibility articles.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the icons for Report, Data, and Model.

Report view is the default view.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the default view.

Power BI Desktop also includes the Power Query Editor, which opens in a separate window. In Power Query Editor, you can build queries and transform data, then load the refined data model into Power BI Desktop to create reports.

Connect to data

With Power BI Desktop installed, you're ready to connect to the ever-expanding world of data. To see the many types of data sources available, select Get Data > More in the Power BI Desktop Home tab, and in the Get Data window, scroll through the list of All data sources. In this quick tour, you connect to a couple of different Web data sources.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Get Data tool.

Imagine you're a data analyst working for a sunglasses retailer. You want to help your client target sunglasses sales where the sun shines most frequently. So you might want to find some information on the web about sunny locations.

On the Power BI Desktop Home tab, select Get Data > Web to connect to a web data source.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Web option of the Get Data tool.

In the From Web dialog box, paste an address about sunny locations into the URL field, and select OK.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the From Web dialog box.

Note

The URL used in this example is fictitious, you can find your own data in various tables and sites on the web.

If prompted, on the Access Web Content screen, select Connect to use anonymous access.

The query functionality of Power BI Desktop goes to work and contacts the web resource. The Navigator window returns what it found on the web page, in this case an HTML table called Ranking of best and worst states for retirement, and five other suggested tables. You're interested in the HTML table, so select it to see a preview.

At this point you can select Load to load the table, or Transform data to make changes in the table before you load it.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing a table display of imported data.

When you select Transform data, Power Query Editor launches, with a representative view of the table. The Query Settings pane is on the right, or you can always show it by selecting Query Settings on the View tab of Power Query Editor.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor with Query Settings.

For more information about connecting to data, see Connect to data in Power BI Desktop.

Shape data

Now that you're connected to a data source, you can adjust the data to meet your needs. To shape data, you provide Power Query Editor with step-by-step instructions for adjusting the data while loading and presenting it. Shaping doesn't affect the original data source, only this particular view of the data.

Note

The table data used in this guide is fictitious and for illustrative purposes. As such, the steps you need to follow with the data you find and use might vary, requiring you to be creative about how you adjust steps or outcomes, which is all part of the fun of learning.

Shaping can mean transforming the data, such as renaming columns or tables, removing rows or columns, or changing data types. Power Query Editor captures these steps sequentially under Applied Steps in the Query Settings pane. Each time this query connects to the data source, those steps are carried out, so the data is always shaped the way you specify. This process occurs when you use the query in Power BI Desktop, or when anyone uses your shared query, such as in the Power BI service.

Notice that the Applied Steps in Query Settings already contain a few steps. You can select each step to see its effect in the Power Query Editor. First, you specified a web source, and then you previewed the table in the Navigator window. In the third step, Changed type, Power BI recognized whole number data when importing it, and automatically changed the original web Text data type to Whole numbers.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor with Query Settings pane showing the three Applied Steps.

If you need to change a data type, select the column or columns to change. Hold down the Shift key to select several adjacent columns, or Ctrl to select non-adjacent columns. Either right-click a column header, select Change Type, and choose a new data type from the menu, or drop down the list next to Data Type in the Transform group of the Home tab, and select a new data type.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the change data type option.

Note

The Power Query Editor in Power BI Desktop uses the ribbon or the right-click menus for available tasks. Most of the tasks you can select on the Home or Transform tabs of the ribbon are also available by right-clicking an item and choosing from the menu that appears.

You can now apply your own changes and transformations to the data and see them in Applied Steps.

For example, for sunglasses sales you're most interested in the weather ranking, so you decide to sort the table by the Weather column instead of by Overall rank. Drop down the arrow next to the Weather header, and select Sort ascending. The data now appears sorted by weather ranking, and the step Sorted Rows appears in Applied Steps.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing Sorted Rows appearing in Applied Steps.

You're not very interested in selling sunglasses to the worst weather states, so you decide to remove them from the table. From the Home tab, select Reduce Rows > Remove Rows > Remove Bottom Rows. In the Remove Bottom Rows dialog box, enter 10, and then select OK.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Remove Bottom Rows dialog box.

The bottom 10 worst weather rows are removed from the table, and the step Removed Bottom Rows appears in Applied Steps.

You decide the table has too much extra information for your needs, and to remove the Affordability, Crime, Culture, and Wellness columns. Select the header of each column that you want to remove. Hold down the Shift key to select several adjacent columns, or Ctrl to select non-adjacent columns.

Then, from the Manage Columns group of the Home tab, select Remove Columns. You can also right-click one of the selected column headers and select Remove Columns from the menu. The selected columns are removed, and the step Removed Columns appears in Applied Steps.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing Remove Columns added to Applied Steps.

On second thought, Affordability might be relevant to sunglasses sales after all. You'd like to get that column back. You can easily undo the last step in the Applied Steps pane by selecting the X delete icon next to the step. Now redo the step, selecting only the columns you want to delete. For more flexibility, you could delete each column as a separate step.

You can right-click any step in the Applied Steps pane and choose to delete it, rename it, move it up or down in the sequence, or add or delete steps after it. For intermediate steps, Power BI Desktop will warn you if the change could affect later steps and break your query.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Applied Steps modification options.

For example, if you no longer wanted to sort the table by Weather, you might try to delete the Sorted Rows step. Power BI Desktop warns you that deleting this step could cause your query to break. You removed the bottom 10 rows after you sorted by weather, so if you remove the sort, different rows will be removed. You also get a warning if you select the Sorted Rows step and try to add a new intermediate step at that point.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Delete Step dialog box.

Finally, you change the table title to be about sunglass sales instead of retirement. Under Properties in the Query Settings pane, replace the old title with Best states for sunglass sales.

The finished query for your shaped data looks like this:

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the finished query for shaped data.

For more information about shaping data, see Shape and combine data in Power BI Desktop.

Combine data

The data about various states is interesting, and will be useful for building additional analysis efforts and queries. But there's one problem: most data out there uses two-letter abbreviations for state codes, not the full names of the states. To use that data, you need some way to associate your state names with their abbreviations.

You're in luck. Another public data source does just that, but the data will need a fair amount of shaping before you can combine it with your sunglass table.

To import the state abbreviations data into Power Query Editor, select New Source > Web from the New Query group on the Home tab of the ribbon.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor selecting Web from New Source.

In the From Web dialog box, enter the URL for the state abbreviations site: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._state_abbreviations.

In the Navigator window, select the table Codes and abbreviations for U.S. states, federal district, territories, and other regions, and then select OK. The table opens in Power Query Editor.

Remove all columns except for Name and status of region, Name and status of region, and ANSI. To keep only these columns, hold down Ctrl and select the columns. Then, either right-click one of the column headers and select Remove Other Columns, or, from the Manage Columns group of the Home tab, select Remove Other Columns.

Drop down the arrow next to the Name and status of region_1 column header, and select Filters > Equals. In the Filter Rows dialog box, drop down the Enter or select a value field next to equals and select State. Select OK.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor's Filter Rows query box.

With extra values like Federal district and island removed, you now have a list of the 50 states and their official two-letter abbreviations. You can rename the columns to make more sense, for example State name, Status, and Abbreviation, by right-clicking the column headers and selecting Rename.

Note that all of these steps are recorded under Applied Steps in the Query Settings pane.

Your shaped table now looks like this:

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor with Applied Steps in the Query Settings pane.

Retitle the table to State codes in the Properties field of Query Settings.

With the State codes table shaped, you can combine these two tables into one. Since the tables you now have are a result of queries you applied to the data, they're also called queries. There are two primary ways of combining queries: merge and append.

When you have one or more columns you'd like to add to another query, you merge the queries. When you have additional rows of data you'd like to add to an existing query, you append the query.

In this case, you want to merge the State codes query into the Best states for sunglasses query. To merge the queries, switch to the Best states for sunglasses query by selecting it from the Queries pane on the left side of Power Query Editor. Then select Merge Queries from the Combine group in the Home tab of the ribbon.

In the Merge window, drop down the field to select State codes from the other queries available. Select the column to match from each table, in this case State from the Best states for sunglasses query and State name from the State codes query.

If you get a Privacy levels dialog, select Ignore privacy levels checks for this file and then select Save. Select OK.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Merge Queries window.

A new column called State codes appears on the right of the Best states for sunglass sales table. It contains the state code query that you merged with the best states for sunglass sales query. All the columns from the merged table are condensed into the State codes column. You can expand the merged table and include only the columns you want.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the State Codes column.

To expand the merged table and select which columns to include, select the Expand icon in the column header. In the Expand dialog box, select only the Abbreviation column. Deselect Use original column name as prefix, and then select OK.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the State Codes Abbreviation column.

Note

You can play around with how to bring in the State codes table. Experiment a bit, and if you don't like the results, just delete that step from the Applied Steps list in the Query Settings pane. It's a free do-over, which you can do as many times as you like until the expand process looks the way you want it.

For a more complete description of the shape and combine data steps, see Shape and combine data in Power BI Desktop.

You now have a single query table that combines two data sources, each of which has been shaped to meet your needs. This query can serve as a basis for more interesting data connections, such as demographics, wealth levels, or recreational opportunities in the states.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Power Query Editor with shaped and combined queries.

For now, you have enough data to create an interesting report in Power BI Desktop. Since this is a milestone, apply the changes in Power Query Editor and load them into Power BI Desktop by selecting Close & Apply from the Home tab of the ribbon. You can also select just Apply to keep the query open in Power Query Editor while you work in Power BI Desktop.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Close and Apply Changes option.

You can make more changes to a table after it's loaded into Power BI Desktop, and reload the model to apply any changes you make. To reopen Power Query Editor from Power BI Desktop, select Transform Data on the Home tab of the Power BI Desktop ribbon.

Build reports

In Power BI Desktop Report view, you can build visualizations and reports. The Report view has six main areas:

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Report view.

  1. The ribbon at the top, which displays common tasks associated with reports and visualizations.
  2. The canvas area in the middle, where you create and arrange visualizations.
  3. The pages tab area at the bottom, which lets you select or add report pages.
  4. The Filters pane, where you can filter data visualizations.
  5. The Visualizations pane, where you can add, change, or customize visualizations, and apply drillthrough.
  6. The Format pane, where you design the report and visualizations.
  7. The Fields pane, which shows the available fields in your queries. You can drag these fields onto the canvas, the Filters pane, or the Visualizations pane to create or modify visualizations.

You can expand and collapse the Filters, Visualizations, and Fields panes by selecting the arrows at the tops of the panes. Collapsing the panes provides more space on the canvas to build cool visualizations.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Fields pane.

To create a simple visualization, just select any field in the fields list, or drag the field from the Fields list onto the canvas. For example, drag the State field from Best states for sunglass sales onto the canvas, and see what happens.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Drag State field to create a map visualization.

Look at that! Power BI Desktop recognized that the State field contained geolocation data and automatically created a map-based visualization. The visualization shows data points for the 40 states from your data model.

The Visualizations pane shows information about the visualization and lets you modify it.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Visualization pane.

  1. The Fields option in the Visualization pane lets you drag data fields to Legend and other field wells in the pane.
  2. The Format option lets you apply formatting and other controls to visualizations.
  3. The icons show the type of visualization created. You can change the type of a selected visualization by selecting a different icon, or create a new visualization by selecting an icon with no existing visualization selected.

The options available in the Fields and Format areas depend on the type of visualization and data you have.

You want your map visualization to show only the top 10 weather states. To show only the top 10 states, in the Filters pane, hover over State is (All) and expand the arrow that appears. Under Filter type, drop down and select Top N. Under Show items, select Bottom, because you want to show the items with the lowest numerical ranks, and enter 10 in the next field.

Drag the Weather field from the Fields pane into the By value field, and then select Apply filter.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Weather filter.

You now see only the top 10 weather states in the map visualization.

You can retitle your visualization. Select the Format icon in the Visualization pane, and type title in the Search box. In the Title card, type Top 10 weather states under Text.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Change Title field in the Visualization pane.

To add a visualization that shows the names of the top 10 weather states and their ranks from 1 to 10, select a blank area of the canvas and then select the Clustered column chart icon from the Visualization pane. In the Fields pane, select State and Weather. A column chart shows the 40 states in your query, ranked from highest to lowest numerical rank, or worst to best weather.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Column chart visualization.

To switch the order of the ranking so that number 1 appears first, select More options (...) at the upper right of the visualization, and select Sort ascending from the menu.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Sort Ascending option.

To limit the table to the top 10 states, apply the same bottom 10 filter as you did for the map visualization.

Retitle the visualization the same way as for the map visualization. Also in the Format section of the Visualization pane, change Y axis > Axis title from Weather to Weather ranking to make it more understandable. Then, turn the Y axis selector to Off. Search for Zoom slider and set it to On, and turn Data labels to On.

Now, the top 10 weather states appear in ranked order along with their numerical rankings.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the finished column chart.

You can make similar or other visualizations for the Affordability and Overall ranking fields, or combine several fields into one visualization. There are all sorts of interesting reports and visualizations you can create. These Table and Line and clustered column chart visualizations shows the top 10 weather states along with their affordability and overall rankings:

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Table as well as Line and Clustered Column visualizations.

You can show different visualizations on different report pages. To add a new page, select the + symbol next to the existing pages on the pages bar, or select Insert > New Page in the Home tab of the ribbon. To rename a page, double-click the page name in the pages bar, or right-click it and select Rename Page, and then type the new name. To go to a different page of the report, select the page from the pages bar.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Pages bar.

You can add text boxes, images, and buttons to your report pages from the Insert group of the Home tab. To set formatting options for visualizations, select a visualization and then select the Format icon in the Visualizations pane. To configure page sizes, backgrounds, and other page information, select the Format icon with no visualization selected.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the finished report page.

When you finish creating your pages and visualizations, select File > Save and save your report. For more information about reports, see Report View in Power BI Desktop.

Share your work

Now that you have a Power BI Desktop report, you can share it with others. There are a few ways to share your work. You can distribute the report .pbix file like any other file, you can upload the .pbix file from the Power BI service, or you can publish directly from Power BI Desktop to the Power BI service. You must have a Power BI account to be able to publish or upload reports to Power BI service.

To publish to the Power BI service from Power BI Desktop, from the Home tab of the ribbon, select Publish.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Publish option.

You might be prompted to sign in to Power BI, or to select a destination.

When the publish process is complete, you see the following dialog:

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Publish Success message.

When you select the link to open the report in Power BI, your report opens in your Power BI site under My workspace > Reports.

Another way to share your work is to load it from within the Power BI service. Go to https://app.powerbi.com to open Power BI in a browser. On your Power BI Home page, select Get data at lower left to start the process of loading your Power BI Desktop report.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Get Data option.

On the next page, select Get from the Files section.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Get Data screen.

On the next page, select Local File. Browse to and select your Power BI Desktop .pbix file, and select Open.

After the file imports, you can see it listed under My workspace > Reports in the left pane of the Power BI service.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing a file imported into Power B I.

When you select the file, the first page of the report appears. You can select different pages from the tabs at the left of the report.

You can make changes to a report in the Power BI service by selecting More options > Edit from the top of the report canvas.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Edit option.

To save your changes, select File > Save a copy.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Save option.

There are all sorts of interesting visuals you can create from your report in the Power BI service, which you can pin to a dashboard. To learn about dashboards in the Power BI service, see Tips for designing a great dashboard. For more information about creating, sharing, and modifying dashboards, see Share a dashboard.

To share a report or dashboard, select Share > Report at the top of the open report or dashboard page, or select the Share icon next to the report or dashboard name in the My workspace > Reports or My workspace > Dashboards lists.

Complete the Share report or Share dashboard screen to send an email or get a link to share your report or dashboard with others.

Screenshot of Power B I Desktop showing the Share Report screen.

There are many compelling data-related mash-ups and visualizations you can do with Power BI Desktop and the Power BI service.

Considerations and limitations

  • Power BI Desktop is updated and released on a monthly basis, incorporating customer feedback and new features. Only the most recent version of Power BI Desktop is supported. If you contact support for Power BI Desktop, you'll be asked to upgrade to the most recent version.
  • For data and reporting that must remain on-premises, there's a separate and specialized version of Power BI called Power BI Report Server. Power BI Report Server uses a separate and specialized version of Power BI Desktop called Power BI Desktop for Power BI Report Server, which updates three times a year. This article describes standard Power BI Desktop.

Power BI Desktop supports connecting to a diagnostics port. The diagnostics port allows other tools to connect to and perform traces for diagnostic purposes. When you're using the diagnostics port, making any changes to the model isn't supported. Changes to the model may lead to corruption and data loss.

For more information on the many capabilities of Power BI Desktop, check out the following resources: