What VALUES does
Return distinct visible values in the current filter context. In Power BI, the key is not only the formula itself but how it behaves with slicers, relationships, visuals and totals.
Syntax or pattern
VALUES(column)5 practical business examples
VALUES in a sales report
Calculate sales where the channel is Online.
Visible Product Count = COUNTROWS(VALUES(Products[Product Name]))This isolates one channel without changing the whole report.
Sales for selected region
Return sales only for the chosen region.
Visible Product Count = COUNTROWS(VALUES(Products[Product Name]))Useful in region-specific cards and titles.
Ignore product filters
Show overall sales regardless of product selection.
Visible Product Count = COUNTROWS(VALUES(Products[Product Name]))Good for percent-of-total calculations.
Filter high value orders
Count orders over a selected threshold.
Visible Product Count = COUNTROWS(VALUES(Products[Product Name]))Use this to identify premium transactions.
Keep a slicer filter while adding a condition
Calculate active customer sales without replacing existing customer filters.
Visible Product Count = COUNTROWS(VALUES(Products[Product Name]))This avoids accidentally broadening the selected customer group.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Using VALUES before checking whether the data model has the right relationships and filter direction.
- Writing one complex measure instead of creating simple base measures first.
- Testing only at the total level and not checking row, category and date contexts.
- Forgetting that slicers, visuals and relationships can all change the filter context.
FAQ
When should I use VALUES in DAX?
Use VALUES when the calculation pattern matches the business question and the result behaves correctly in the current filter context.
Why is my VALUES measure returning the wrong total?
Most total issues come from row context, filter context, relationships, or using a column aggregation where an iterator or CALCULATE pattern is needed.
Can I use this VALUES pattern in a calculated column?
Some patterns work in calculated columns, but most reporting calculations should be measures so they respond to slicers and report filters.
Here are some ideas for you
Optional resources that may help if you are learning Power BI, building dashboards, or writing DAX measures often.
- Power BI booksSee ideas
Learn modeling, report design and DAX patterns with structured references.
- DAX booksSee ideas
Keep a DAX reference close when building measures and troubleshooting context.
- Data visualization booksSee ideas
Improve charts, dashboards and storytelling beyond the formula itself.
- Ultrawide monitorsSee ideas
Useful for viewing the report canvas, data model and DAX editor side by side.
- Ergonomic mouseSee ideas
Helpful during long report-building and data-modeling sessions.
- Dashboard planning notebooksSee ideas
Sketch relationships, measures and report layouts before building.
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