Jump to a Cell or Named Range (Ctrl+G)
Updated: February 2026
When you stay on the keyboard, you stay in the logic of the model. Navigate huge models quickly and reduce scrolling errors. In practice, this is one of those shortcuts that compounds: the more rows, formulas, and revisions you have, the more time it saves.
Shortcut
- Windows: Ctrl+G
- Mac: Ctrl+G
Why it matters for formulas
Formula work is mostly navigation, selection, and controlled repetition. When you can apply an action without leaving the keyboard, you reduce mis-clicks, maintain focus, and keep reference patterns consistent. That consistency is what makes formulas easier to copy, easier to audit, and easier to hand off.
How to use it
- Select the correct cell or range first so Excel applies the action where you intend.
- Use the shortcut, then confirm the immediate change (dialog opens, selection changes, or formula updates).
- If you plan to copy a formula, check which parts must stay fixed and lock them before filling.
- Commit the change, then validate with a fast spot-check on a few rows and edge cases.
Real-world example
Example: paste values after you finish a model so downstream changes do not break your numbers. The goal is to build a reliable pattern once, then apply it across the dataset using selection-and-fill methods instead of manual edits.
Windows vs Mac notes
On many Macs, function keys may require the Fn key depending on system settings. If you switch between platforms, write down your top 10 shortcuts with both key combos so you do not lose speed while context-switching.
Common mistakes
- Applying it to the wrong selection, which leads to partial fills or missing rows.
- Forgetting to lock a constant input before copying formulas across a table.
Once this shortcut is in muscle memory, you will spend less time navigating Excel and more time improving the logic, readability, and reliability of your formulas.
Frequently Asked Questions about Jump to a Cell or Named Range (Ctrl+G)
Is Jump to a Cell or Named Range (Ctrl+G) suitable for beginners?
Yes, absolutely. Our guide to Jump to a Cell or Named Range (Ctrl+G) explains all basics clearly.
How much does Jump to a Cell or Named Range (Ctrl+G) cost?
Costs vary depending on the provider. A comparison is always worth it.
Where can I find more information?
Right here in our expert area for consumerguidepro-excel-keyboard-shortcuts.