Since Excel 2010, it has been possible to save Excel as PDF.The PDF format was then and continues to be, one of the most common file formats for distributing documents.
The code examples below provide the VBA macros to automate the creation of PDFs from Excel using the ExportAsFixedFormat method. This means you do not require a PDF printer installed, as Excel can print directly to a PDF document.
Table of Contents
- Saving Excel workbooks, sheets, charts, and ranges as PDF
- Save active sheet as PDF
- Save active workbook as PDF
- Save selection as PDF
- Save a range as PDF
- Save a chart as PDF
- Adapting the code to your scenario
- Notes for saving PDF documents
- Selecting specific worksheets before saving as PDF
- Looping and saving as separate PDFs
- Loop through sheets
- Loop through selected sheets
- Loop through charts
- Other PDF print options
- VBA Save to PDF Example using all the options
- Other fixed formats available (xlTypeXPS)
- Conclusion
The example codes can be used independently or as part of a larger automation process. For example, check out this post to see an example of how to loop through a list and print a PDF for each item: Create multiple PDFs based on a list
Rather than going from Excel to PDF, you might want to go the other way; from PDF to Excel.Check out these posts for possible solutions for that scenario:
- How to Import PDF Files into Excel with Power Query
- Get data from PDF into Excel
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File name: 0019 Save Excel as PDF with VBA.zip
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Saving Excel workbooks, sheets, charts, and ranges as PDF
This section contains the base code to save Excel as PDF from different objects (workbooks, worksheets, ranges, and charts).From a VBA perspective, it is the ExportAsFilxedFormat method combined with the Type property set to xlTypePDF that creates a PDF.
Save active sheet as PDF
The following code saves the selected sheets as a single PDF.
Sub SaveActiveSheetsAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"'Save Active Sheet(s) as PDFActiveSheet.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
Save active workbook as PDF
Use the following macro to save all the visible sheets from a workbook.
Sub SaveActiveWorkbookAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"'Save active workbook as PDFActiveWorkbook.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
Save selection as PDF
Sometimes, we only want to save a small part of a worksheet to a PDF.The following code prints only the selected cells.
Sub SaveSelectionAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"'Save selection as PDFSelection.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
Save a range as PDF
The macro below saves a specified range as a PDF.
Sub SaveRangeAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringDim ws as WorksheetDim rng As RangesaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"Set ws = Sheets("Sheet1")Set rng = ws.Range("A1:H20")'Save a range as PDFrng.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
Save a chart as PDF
The VBA code below saves a specified chart as a PDF.
Sub SaveChartAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringDim ws As WorksheetDim cht As ChartsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"Set ws = Sheets("Sheet1")Set cht = ws.ChartObjects("Chart 1").Chart'Save a chart as PDFcht.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
Rather than naming a specific chart, the macro could run based on the active chart. Change this:
Set cht = ws.ChartObjects("Chart 1").Chart
To this:
Set cht = ActiveChart
Adapting the code to your scenario
To adapt the code examples to your specific needs, you should adjust certain lines of code.
Change the save location
To save the file in the correct location, change this list of code:
saveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"
If you would prefer the save location to be included in a cell, change the code to reference the sheet and cell containing the file path.
saveLocation = Sheets("Sheet1").Range("B2").Value
Change the worksheet
In this line of code, change the text “Sheet1” to the sheet name in your workbook.
Set ws = Sheets("Sheet1")
Change the range
The following line of codes references the range to be printed to PDF.
Set rng = ws.Range("A1:H20")
Change the chart
To print a chart to PDF, change the chart’s name in the following line of code.
Set cht = ws.ChartObjects("Chart 1").Chart
If you are unsure of the chart name, it is shown in the Name box when the chart is selected.
Notes for saving PDF documents
While the Filename property is optional, it is important to know where the file is saved.
- If the Filename property is not provided, the PDF saves in your default folder location using the Excel workbook’s name with the .pdf file extension.
- Where a file name is provided, but not a file path, the document saves in your default folder location with the name provided.
- When the .pdf file extension is not provided, the suffix is added automatically.
- If a PDF exists in the specified save location, the existing file is overwritten. Therefore, it may be necessary to include file handling procedures to prevent overwriting existing documents and handling errors.
- To save as an XPS document format, change xlTypePDF for xlTypeXPS.
Selecting specific worksheets before saving as PDF
If more than one worksheet is active, the PDF created includes all the active sheets.The following code selects multiple worksheets from an array before saving the PDF.
Sub SelectSheetsAndSaveAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim saveLocation As StringDim sheetArray As VariantsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\OneDrive\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"sheetArray = Array("Sheet1", "Sheet2")'Select specific sheets from workbook, the save all as PDFSheets(sheetArray).SelectActiveSheet.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocationEnd Sub
In the code above, an array is used to select the specific sheets. Alternatively, the Split array function with a text string could provide a more dynamic solution. This method is covered here: VBA Arrays.
Looping and saving as separate PDFs
To save multiple PDFs quickly, we can use VBA to loop through sheets or charts and save each individually.
Loop through sheets
The following macro loops through each worksheet in the active workbook and saves each as its own PDF. Each PDF is saved in the same folder as the workbook, where each PDF’s name is based on the worksheet’s name.
Sub LoopSheetsSaveAsPDF()'Create variablesDim ws As Worksheet'Loop through all worksheets and save as individual PDF in same folder'as the Excel fileFor Each ws In ActiveWorkbook.Worksheets ws.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=ThisWorkbook.Path & "/" & ws.Name & ".pdf"NextEnd Sub
Loop through selected sheets
The following macro loops through only the selected worksheets in the active workbook and saves each as its own PDF.
Sub LoopSelectedSheetsSaveAsPDF()'Create variablesDim ws As WorksheetDim sheetArray As Variant'Capture the selected sheetsSet sheetArray = ActiveWindow.SelectedSheets'Loop through each selected worksheetFor Each ws In sheetArray ws.Select ws.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=ThisWorkbook.Path & "/" & ws.Name & ".pdf"Next ws'Reselect the selected sheetssheetArray.SelectEnd Sub
Loop through charts
The following code loops through each chart on the active sheet and saves each as a separate PDF.
Sub LoopChartsSaveAsPDF()'Create and assign variablesDim chtObj As ChartObjectDim ws As WorksheetSet ws = ActiveSheet'Loop through all charts and save as individual PDF in same folder'as the Excel fileFor Each chtObj In ws.ChartObjects chtObj.Chart.ExportAsFixedFormat Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=ThisWorkbook.Path & "/" & chtObj.Name & ".pdf"Next chtObjEnd Sub
Other PDF print options
When using ExportAsFixedFormat, there are other optional settings available:
'Open the document after it is saved - options are True /FalseOpenAfterPublish:=False'Include the Excel document properties into the PDF - options are True /FalseIncludeDocProperties:=True'Does the created PDF adhere to the Print Areas already set in the 'worksheet - options are True /FalseIgnorePrintAreas:=False'Set the output quality of the created document - options are 'xlQualityMinimum / xlQualityStandardQuality:=xlQualityStandard'The page to start printing. If excluded, will start from the first pageFrom:=1'The page to print to. If excluded, will go to the last pageTo:=2
VBA Save to PDF Example using all the options
The code below demonstrates how to use all the options within a single macro.These options can be flexed to meet your requirements.
Sub SaveAsPDFOptions()Dim saveLocation As StringsaveLocation = "C:\Users\marks\Documents\myPDFFile.pdf"'Example using all the optionsActiveSheet.ExportAsFixedFormat _ Type:=xlTypePDF, _ Filename:=saveLocation, _ OpenAfterPublish:=False, _ IncludeDocProperties:=True, _ IgnorePrintAreas:=False, _ Quality:=xlQualityStandard, _ From:=1, To:=2End Sub
Other fixed formats available (xlTypeXPS)
The Type property can also create XPS documents when it is set to xlTypeXPS rather than xlTypePDF.XPS is Microsoft’s fixed file format; it is similar to PDF but based on the XML language. It is rarely used in the real world but is an option if required.
Conclusion
Learning how to save Excel as PDF is a good time investment.Each of these code snippets on its own is useful.However, the code examples above can be used in other automation to create even more time-saving.
Related posts:
- Excel – Create multiple PDFs based on a list
- Loop through selected sheets with VBA
- How to loop through each item in Data Validation list with VBA
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