The SORTBY function takes three primary arguments: array, by_array, and sort_order. The first argument, array, is the range or array to be sorted. The second argument, by_array, contains the values to be used for sorting. These values can come from an existing range, or from an array created by a formula. Note that by_array values do not need to be part of the source data, and do not need to appear in the output. However, by_array must have dimensions compatible with array. For example, if array contains ten rows, by_array should also contain ten rows. Finally, the optional sort_order argument determines sort direction. Use 1 for ascending order and -1 for descending order. By default, SORTBY will sort in ascending order. To sort by more than one level, provide additional sort_by and sort_order arguments in pairs. Unlike the SORT function, the SORTBY function does not have an argument that explicitly controls sorting by rows versus sorting by columns. Instead, the range or array provided for the by_array argument will determine the sort orientation automatically. When by_array is a vertical range, SORTBY sorts vertically by rows. When by_array is a horizontal range, SORTBY sorts horizontally by columns.
Basic example
To sort range1 in ascending order using values in range2: To switch the sort order to descending, use:
Sort with arrays
The SORTBY function can be used with arrays and array constants as well. In the example below, we sort the first four letters in the alphabet in a custom order using the numeric values in the second array. By default, sort order is ascending: Using negative one (-1) for sort order will sort the letters in descending order based on the numeric values in the second array: Ranges and arrays can be mixed. The formula below will sort the values in A1:A5 using the array constant provided: Note the dimensions or the range argument must be compatible with those of the by_array argument. In this case, both contain five rows.
Example - sort by score
In the example shown above, the formula in E5 is: The output in E5:E14 is the list of names sorted by scores in descending order. To sort by grades in ascending order use:
Sort by two levels
To sort a set of data by two levels, the generic formula is: where array is a range that contains all data to be sorted, and by_array1 and by_array2 are compatible ranges or arrays, and sort_order1 and sort_order2 are provided as 1 (ascending) or -1 (descending). Example: sort by two columns.
Notes
All array arguments must have compatible dimensions or SORTBY will return #VALUE! The by_array arguments can only be one row or one column. The sort_order argument can only be -1 (descending) or 1 (ascending). If no value is provided for sort_order, SORTBY will sort in ascending order.
Dave Bruns
Hi - I’m Dave Bruns, and I run Exceljet with my wife, Lisa. Our goal is to help you work faster in Excel. We create short videos, and clear examples of formulas, functions, pivot tables, conditional formatting, and charts.