Is there a harder working team in Excel, than the reliable duo of INDEX and MATCH? These functions work beautifully together, with MATCH identifying the location of an item, and INDEX pulling the results out from the murky depths of data. See how to find text with INDEX and MATCH.
Find Text in a String
Last week, Jodie asked if I could help with a problem, and INDEX and MATCH came to the rescue again.
Jodie sent me a picture of her worksheet, with text strings in column A and codes in column D. Each text string contained one of the codes, and Jodie wanted that code to appear in column B.
Would you use INDEX and MATCH to find the code, or another method? Keep reading to see my solution, and please share your ideas, if you have other ways to solve this.

Count the Occurrences With COUNTIF
When you want to find text that’s buried somewhere in a string, the * wildcard character is useful. We can use the wildcard with COUNTIF, to see if the string is found somewhere in the text.
I entered this test formula in cell B1. This formula needs to be array-entered, so press Ctrl + Shift + Enter.
=COUNTIF(A1,”*” & $D$1:$D$3 & “*”)

There are wildcard characters before and after the cell references to D1:D3, so the text will be found anywhere within the text string.
To see the results of the array formula, click in the formula bar, and press the F9 key. The array shows 0;1;0 so it found a match for CAT, which is in the second cell in the range, $D$1:$D$3.
- Important: After you check the results, press the Esc key, to exit the formula without saving the calculated results.

Get the Position With MATCH
Next, you can add the MATCH function, wrapped around the COUNTIF formula, to get the position of the “1” in the results.
Make the following change to the formula in cell B1, and remember to press Ctrl + Shift + Enter.
=MATCH(1,COUNTIF(A1,”*”&$D$1:$D$3&”*”),0)

The result is 2, so the code “CAT”, the 2nd item in range D1:D3, was found in cell A1.
Get the Code With INDEX
Next, the INDEX function can return the code from the range $D$1:$D$3, that is at the position that the MATCH function identified.
Make the following change to the formula in cell B1, and remember to press Ctrl + Shift + Enter.
=INDEX($D$1:$D$3,MATCH(1,COUNTIF(A1,”*”&$D$1:$D$3&”*”),0))

The result is CAT, so the formula is working correctly.
Prevent Error Results With IFERROR
There should be one valid code in each text string, but sometimes the data doesn’t cooperate. Just in case there are text strings without a code, or more than one instance of the code, you can use IFERROR to show an empty string, instead of an error. (Excel 2007 and later versions)
=IFERROR(INDEX($D$1:$D$3,MATCH(1,COUNTIF(A1,”*”&$D$1:$D$3&”*”),0)),””)
Enter with Ctrl + Shift + Enter, and then copy the formula down to row 10.

In cell B6, the formula returns an empty string, and the cell looks blank, because none of the valid codes are in the text that’s in cell A6.
Use a Named Range
Instead of referring to range $D$1:$D$3, you could name that range, and use the name in the INDEX/MATCH formula. That would make it easier to maintain, if the size of the codes list will change.

Download Find Text With INDEX and MATCH Sample File
To get the sample file, and see how the formula works, go to the INDEX and MATCH page on my Contextures site.
In the Download section on that page, look for sample file 4 – Find Text From Code List. The zipped file is in xlsx format, and does not contain macros.
More INDEX and MATCH Examples
There are more examples of using INDEX and MATCH on my Contextures site.
For example, this video shows how to use INDEX and MATCH to find the best price.
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Hello Debra,
I do appreciate your help. Would it be possible to add an exact match to your formula? At the moment if the word searched is embedded in another word a “false positive” is generated. Would it be simple to add this to your formula?
Thanks again for your help.
This is really a great example. Thank you.
I was wondering, is it possible to return the cell references, or cell values if the text that is searched for appears in more than one cell in a range.
To make is simpler, the search text could even be just one cell. If I want to find “bloggers” in A1:A20, and it appears in A3 and A5, can I get a result that either shows 1,5 or maybe copy the contents of those cells into new cells?
I can find tons of help on finding values in arrays – but all of them either return only the first occurrence, or list how many occurrences. None help me locate (index) more than one occurrence or show their values.
many thanks for the advice. useful!
This would also help
=LOOKUP(1E+100,SEARCH(D$1:D$3,A1),D$1:D$3)
Hi,
thanks a lot for this post, it was a great help.
I was able to replicate this for my purposes, but was wondering if we can take it one step further – this is my data:
These examples of the original names:
NL > NL > VO > SM > Hoofddorp
NL > NL > OF > SM > Hoofddorp
NL > NL > Brand > SM > Hoofddorp
NL > NL > VO > SM > Amsterdam
NL > NL > VO > SM > Utrecht
…
…
These are examples of the elements I need to find in the original names:
> VO
> OF
> MR
> Brand
– Büro
– VO
– Coworking
Then, I want to assign each of these elements to another definition, but some of them will have the same definition, e.g.:
> OF
– Coworking
– Büro
They all would have to be defined as “Office” – I can do this obviously with a seperate VLOOKUP formula, but do you think it’s possible to do this all in one formula?
Thanks a lot,
Patrick
No worries – was just able to do it myself 🙂
Here is my solution:
=VLOOKUP((INDEX(ProductList,MATCH(1,COUNTIF(D2,”*”&ProductList&”*”),0))),MatchProduct,2,FALSE)
ProductList & MatchProduct are both named ranges.
Any more efficient solution maybe?
Thanks anyways,
Patrick