Reading Charts and Graphs
Discounts, tax, tips, profit margins
Medication dosages, IV drip rates, vital monitoring
Charts and graphs turn raw numbers into visual information that is easier to understand, compare, and analyze. Reading them accurately is one of the most frequently tested statistics skills on the GED, SAT, and other standardized tests — and it is one of the most practical skills for any workplace.
Bar Charts
A bar chart uses horizontal or vertical bars to compare values across categories. The length or height of each bar represents a quantity.
How to read a bar chart:
- Read the title — it tells you what the chart is about.
- Check the axes — the horizontal axis (-axis) usually shows categories, and the vertical axis (-axis) shows values.
- Read the scale — note the units and intervals on the value axis.
- Compare bar heights to answer questions about the data.
Example 1: Monthly Sales Data
A bar chart shows monthly widget sales for a store:
Monthly Widget Sales
Questions you can answer from this chart:
- Which month had the highest sales? May (210 units)
- How many more units were sold in April than February? more units
- What is the trend? Sales increased steadily from February through May.
Common mistake: Misreading the scale. If the -axis starts at 50 instead of 0, the differences between bars look larger than they actually are. Always check where the axis starts.
Line Graphs
A line graph connects data points with lines to show how a value changes over time. It is ideal for spotting trends, patterns, and rates of change.
How to read a line graph:
- Read the title and axis labels — the -axis is typically time.
- Identify the scale and units on both axes.
- Follow the line — an upward slope means increase, a downward slope means decrease, and a flat line means no change.
- Look for steep vs. gradual slopes — steeper means faster change.
Example 2: Patient Temperature Over 24 Hours
A nurse records a patient’s temperature every 4 hours:
Patient Temperature Over 24 Hours
Reading the trend:
- Temperature rose from 8 AM to 4 PM (peaked at 101.8°F).
- Temperature fell from 4 PM to 4 AM (returned to near normal at 98.9°F).
- The steepest increase was between 12 PM and 4 PM (°F in 4 hours).
- The peak at 4 PM might prompt a nurse to administer medication or increase monitoring.
Pie Charts
A pie chart shows parts of a whole as slices of a circle. Each slice represents a percentage or proportion of the total. All slices must add up to 100%.
How to read a pie chart:
- Read the title to understand what whole is being divided.
- Read the labels — each slice should show a category and a percentage (or value).
- Compare slice sizes — larger slices represent larger portions of the whole.
- Check that percentages add up to 100% (or close to it due to rounding).
Example 3: Store Expense Breakdown
A retail store’s monthly expenses total 20,000, broken down as:
Monthly Expense Breakdown
Questions you can answer:
- What is the largest expense? Payroll (40%)
- How much is spent on rent and utilities combined? , or
- If total expenses rise to 24,000 but percentages stay the same, what is the new payroll cost?
Histograms
A histogram looks like a bar chart, but it shows the frequency (how often values occur) within ranges called bins or intervals. Unlike a bar chart, the bars in a histogram touch — there are no gaps, because the data is continuous.
How to read a histogram:
- Read the axis labels — the -axis shows data ranges (bins), the -axis shows frequency.
- Read the height of each bar to see how many data points fall in that range.
- Look at the shape — is it symmetric, skewed left, or skewed right?
Example 4: Test Score Distribution
A class of 30 students takes an exam. Their scores are grouped into bins:
Test Score Distribution (30 students)
What the histogram tells you:
- The most common score range is 70-79 (10 students).
- Most students scored between 70 and 89 ( students, or ).
- The distribution is roughly symmetric with a slight lean toward higher scores.
- Total students: (always verify the total).
Chart Type Reference
| Chart Type | Best For | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Bar chart | Comparing values across categories | Bars separated by gaps |
| Line graph | Showing change over time | Connected data points |
| Pie chart | Showing parts of a whole | Slices add to 100% |
| Histogram | Showing frequency distribution | Bars touch (continuous data) |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Ignoring the axis scale. A -axis that starts at 50 instead of 0 exaggerates differences. Always check the starting value and intervals.
- Confusing bar charts and histograms. Bar charts compare categories (with gaps between bars). Histograms show frequency of continuous data (bars touch).
- Assuming pie chart slices are proportional by eye. Always read the labels — a 30% slice and a 25% slice can look nearly the same.
- Missing units. Check whether the -axis is in dollars, thousands of dollars, percentage, number of people, etc. Misreading units can change your answer dramatically.
- Reading between data points incorrectly. On a line graph, the line between two points is an estimate — the actual value at that moment may differ.
Real-World Application: Retail — Using a Sales Bar Chart for Inventory Planning
A store manager reviews a bar chart showing monthly unit sales of winter jackets:
Winter Jacket Sales by Month
Analysis:
Step 1: Identify the peak. December has the highest sales at 140 units.
Step 2: Calculate total units sold over the season.
Step 3: Determine what percentage of sales occur in Nov-Dec (the peak period).
Step 4: Make inventory decisions. Since about 55% of all jacket sales happen in November and December, the manager should have the bulk of inventory stocked by late October. Orders should start tapering after January, and clearance sales should begin in February when demand drops sharply.
This kind of data-driven decision-making is exactly what reading charts enables in the real world.
Practice Problems
Test your understanding with these problems. Click to reveal each answer.
Problem 1: A bar chart shows that Department A earned 45,000 in revenue and Department B earned 30,000. How much more revenue did Department A earn, and what is the percentage difference relative to Department B?
Difference:
Percentage difference:
Answer: Department A earned 15,000 more, which is 50% more than Department B.
Problem 2: A pie chart shows a household budget: Housing 30%, Food 20%, Transport 15%, Savings 10%, Other 25%. If total monthly income is 4,500, how much goes to food and transport combined?
Answer: 1,575 goes to food and transport combined.
Problem 3: A histogram shows the following frequency distribution for patient wait times at a clinic. How many patients waited less than 20 minutes?
| Wait Time (min) | 0-9 | 10-19 | 20-29 | 30-39 | 40+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 8 | 15 | 12 | 4 | 1 |
Answer: 23 patients waited less than 20 minutes.
Problem 4: A line graph shows a company’s quarterly profit: Q1 = 50K, Q2 = 65K, Q3 = 60K, Q4 = 80K. During which quarter did the biggest increase occur, and by how much?
Q1 to Q2:
Q2 to Q3: (a decrease)
Q3 to Q4:
Answer: The biggest increase was from Q3 to Q4, a jump of 20K.
Problem 5: A bar chart’s -axis goes from 80 to 100 (not starting at 0). Bar A reaches 95 and Bar B reaches 85. A coworker says “A is almost double B.” Is that correct?
No. The actual values are 95 and 85. The ratio is , meaning A is only about 12% larger than B. The misleading axis scale (starting at 80 instead of 0) makes the difference look much larger than it is. This is one of the most common ways charts can be visually misleading.
Key Takeaways
- Bar charts compare categories, line graphs show trends over time, pie charts show parts of a whole, and histograms show how frequently values occur within ranges.
- Always read the title, axis labels, scale, and units before interpreting any chart.
- Check whether the axis starts at zero — a non-zero starting point can exaggerate differences.
- Do not confuse bar charts (categorical, bars have gaps) with histograms (continuous data, bars touch).
- Charts are tools for making decisions — practice extracting specific numbers, calculating differences, and identifying trends.
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All Statistics topicsLast updated: March 28, 2026