Investigate possible issues with add-ins

While add-ins can enhance your experience, they can occasionally interfere, or conflict with Excel. Try starting Excel without add-ins to see if the problem goes away.

  1. Do one of the following:
    • If you are running Windows 10, choose Start > All apps > Windows System > Run > type Excel/safe in the Run box, then click OK.
    • If you are running Windows 8, click Run in the Apps menu > type Excel/safe in the Run box, then click OK.
    • If you are running Windows 7, click Start > type Excel/safe in Search programs and files, then click OK.
  2. If the issue is resolved, click File > Options > Add-ins.
  3. Select COM Add-ins, and click Go.
  4. Clear all the check boxes in the list, and click OK.
  5. Close and restart Excel.

If the issue does not occur when you restart Excel, start enabling your add-ins one at a time until does. This will allow you to figure out which add-in is causing the problem. Be sure and restart Excel each time you enable an add-in.

If disabling add-ins did not resolve your issue, continue on to the next item on the list.

Investigate Excel file details and contents

Excel files can exist on the computer for a long time. They are upgraded from version to version, and frequently travel from one user to another user. Frequently, a user inherits an Excel file but doesn't know what is included in the file. The following things can cause performance or crashing issues:

If these steps do not resolve your issue, continue on to the next item on the list.

Check whether your file is being generated by a third party

Sometimes Excel files are generated by a third-party application. In this case, the files may be generated incorrectly, and some features may not work properly when you open the files in Excel. If this occurs, test the features in new files outside the third-party application. If the features work correctly, you should make sure that the third party is aware of the issue.
If your issue is not resolved after you test it outside the third-party application, continue on to the next item on the list.

Perform a selective startup to determine whether a program, process, or service conflicts with Excel

When you start Windows, several applications and services start automatically, and then run in the background. These applications and services can interfere with other software on your PC. Performing a selective startup (also known as a 'clean boot') can help you identify problems with conflicting applications. To perform a selective startup, choose one of the following links depending on your version of Windows, then follow the steps in the article:

Windows 10, Windows 7, Windows 8: Run Selective Startup using System Configuration
Windows Vista: Run Selective Startup using System Configuration
Windows XP: How to create and configure user accounts in Windows XP

Selective startup is used to help identify the offending process, service, or application that conflicts with Excel.
If your issue is not resolved after you re-create the profile, continue on to the next item on the list.

Repair your Office programs

Repairing your Office programs can resolve issues with Excel not responding, hanging or freezing by automatically repairing errors in Office files. For instructions on doing this, see: Repair an Office application.

If repairing your Office programs did not resolve your issue, continue on to the next item on the list.

Check to see if your antivirus software is up-to-date or conflicting with Excel

If your antivirus software is not up-to-date, Excel may not function properly.

Check whether your antivirus software is up-to-date:

To keep up with new viruses that are created, antivirus software vendors periodically provide updates that you can download from the Internet. Download the latest updates by visiting your antivirus software vendor’s website.

For a list of antivirus vendors, see: Consumer security software providers.

Check whether your antivirus software is conflicting with Excel:

If your antivirus software includes integration with Excel you may experience performance issues. In this case, you can disable all Excel integration within the antivirus software. Or, you can disable any antivirus software add-ins that are installed in Excel.

Important: Changing your antivirus settings may make your PC vulnerable to viral, fraudulent or malicious attacks. Microsoft does not recommend that you attempt to change your antivirus settings. Use this workaround at your own risk.

You may have to contact your antivirus software vendor to determine how to configure your software to exclude any integration with Excel or to exclude scanning in Excel.

More Information

Advanced troubleshooting

If the methods that were mentioned earlier did not resolve your issue, the issue could be either file specific, or environmental. The following section describes how to troubleshoot additional issue that can cause Excel to hang, or crash.

Environmental factors

Environmental factors are just as important as file contents, and add-ins when you are troubleshooting crashes. You can help determine the cause of your issue by taking the following actions:

The following sections describe some areas that are worth investigating.

Where the file is stored

Moving the file locally will help determine whether there is something wrong with the file, or with where the file is saved. Several issues can arise when you save an Excel file over a network or to a web server. It is a good idea to save the file locally. This should be done in the following scenarios:

• Redirected 'My Documents' folder to server location
• Offline files
• Opening files from a Webfolder or SharePoint
• Remote Desktop/Citrix
• Network appliances
• Virtualized environment. For more information about Microsoft software that is running in a virtualized environment, see the following article: Support policy for Microsoft software running in non-Microsoft hardware virtualization software.

Memory

Excel files can grow fairly large when you start adding lots of formatting and shapes. Make sure that your system has enough RAM to run the application. For system requirements of the Microsoft Office suites, go to the following Microsoft articles:

System requirements for Office 2013
System requirements for Office 2010
System requirements for Excel 2007


Office 2010 introduced native 64-bit versions of Office products to take advantage of larger processing capacities. To read more about 64-bit editions of Office, go to the following Microsoft articles:

64-bit editions of Office 2013
Understanding 64-bit Office

Printers and video drivers

Excel crashing fix video

When you start Excel, it examines the default printer and video drivers that will display your Excel workbooks. Excel is printer-intensive, and it will run slower when Excel files are saved in Page Break Preview view. Testing a file by using different printers such as the Microsoft XPS Document Writer printer driver, or the VGA video driver will determine whether the problem is with a specific printer or video driver.

If you still have hanging or crashing issues in Excel after you work through the resolution methods that are mentioned here, you should contact Microsoft Support for guided troubleshooting.

Need more help?

You can always ask an expert in the Excel Tech Community, get support in the Answers community, or suggest a new feature or improvement on Excel User Voice.