Free pie chart maker. No signup needed.

Show how parts add up to a whole.

Pie charts show how parts add up to a whole. Paste any text with percentages or counts. LLMVIZ figures out the slices, labels them, and renders the chart. No spreadsheet, no setup, no signup.

How it works

Step 1

Paste your data

Any text with categories and numbers. Survey results, financial summaries, research findings. Messy is fine.

Step 2

Click Visualize

LLMVIZ uses an LLM to pull out the data, pick the right shape, and render the chart.

Step 3

Export and share

Save as PNG, copy to your clipboard, or download the data as a CSV.

When to use a pie chart

Budget breakdown

Show what percent of revenue or spend goes to each category. Useful for board decks and finance reviews.

Survey responses

Visualize the distribution of answers to a multiple-choice question across your respondents.

Market share

Compare how a market splits among competitors. Two pies side by side reads well for before/after.

Time allocation

See how a day, week, or quarter divides across activities. Good for personal productivity reviews.

Demographics

Break down a population by age, region, or any single categorical attribute.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best free pie chart maker?

For paste-and-go, LLMVIZ is the fastest. No spreadsheet to set up, no signup. Canva, Adobe Express, and Google Sheets are popular alternatives if you prefer manual layout.

How do I add percentages to a pie chart?

LLMVIZ reads percentages directly from your input. Paste "X 45%, Y 25%, Z 30%" and the slices size automatically. Raw counts work too: it converts them to percentages on its own.

When should I use a pie chart vs a bar chart?

Use a pie chart when the parts genuinely add up to 100% of one whole and you have 6 or fewer categories. Use a bar chart for independent values, for many categories, or when accuracy of comparison matters more than the share-of-total message.

Where can I find a pie chart maker for beginners?

LLMVIZ is the simplest option for beginners. There's no learning curve. Paste any text with percentages or numbers and click Visualize. The first chart usually takes under 30 seconds.

Other chart types