Comparison Chart Maker Comparison Charts
Describe what you want to compare and get a clean, labeled comparison chart or table in seconds. Feature tables with checkmarks, pros and cons charts, pricing tiers, before vs after layouts, and more.
Comparison Chart Maker
Your comparison chart will appear here
Describe your comparison and click Generate
Comparison Chart Examples
Browse comparison charts made with Figviz, or generate your own above
Feature Comparison Table with Checkmarks
A three-column feature table comparing products with checkmark and cross icons for each attribute.
Pros and Cons Comparison Chart
A two-column pros and cons layout with color-coded pros in green and cons in red.
Side-by-Side Bar Comparison Chart
A grouped horizontal bar chart comparing three options across four performance metrics.
Pricing Tier Comparison Table
A three-tier pricing table with Free, Pro, and Enterprise columns and feature rows.
Before vs After Comparison
A before vs after layout comparing key metrics before and after a change or improvement.
X vs Y Concept Comparison
A structured two-column X vs Y chart highlighting the key differences between two concepts or approaches.
What is a comparison chart maker?
A comparison chart maker is a tool that arranges items, options, or concepts side by side so their differences and similarities are easy to read. Instead of manually building tables in a spreadsheet or slide deck, you describe what you want to compare and the tool generates a clean, labeled chart ready to share. Figviz uses AI to turn a plain text description into a professional comparison chart, whether you need a feature table with checkmarks, a pros and cons layout, a grouped bar chart, or a pricing tier summary. The result is a high-resolution image you can drop straight into a report, presentation, or web page.
How to make a comparison chart
Types of comparison charts
Tips for a clear, effective comparison chart
Keep the number of items to three or four per comparison so the chart stays readable at a glance. Use consistent criteria across all columns so each row answers the same question for every option. Put the most important attribute at the top, since readers scan down the first column first. For feature tables, checkmarks and X icons communicate faster than yes/no text. If you are comparing numerical values (price, speed, score), consider a bar chart instead of a table because relative differences are easier to see visually. Always add a title and a legend or header row so the chart makes sense without extra context.
Where comparison charts are used
Comparison charts appear across research reports, product requirement documents, investor decks, marketing landing pages, academic papers, and blog posts. Analysts use feature tables to evaluate vendor shortlists. Marketers use pricing tier tables on landing pages to guide plan selection. Teachers use two-column X vs Y charts to explain contrasting concepts. Consultants use before vs after layouts to show the impact of a recommendation. Whatever your field, a well-structured comparison chart turns a complex evaluation into a single, scannable visual.
Frequently asked questions
Related chart and diagram tools
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