This is best Fabric, Power BI, SQL and AI community event. How do we know? The last event sold out! Save €200 with code FABCMTY200.
Register nowA new Data Days event is coming soon! This time we’re going bigger than ever. Fabric, Power BI, SQL, AI and more. Don't miss out.
Hi All!
I am trying to filter a matrix. To simplify, let's say I have two rows: state and city. For my value, I have count of new neighborhoods. I want to filter out any states that have less than five new neighborhoods. How do I do this?! Seems like it should be simple but running into an issue where the filter pane option only seems to filter the lowest row level. Why? Or, if there is a better way to do this, to filter out the states with less than five new neighborhoods? Seems like it's some sort of groupby option, but having a hard time understanding how the pieces fit together.
Hi there,
Based on somewhat limited information in your post, this is what I would recommend:
You can create a measure that returns a 1 or 0 (or whatever you prefer) if a state has less than 5 new neighbourhoods. For example:
Filter =
IF (
CALCULATE (
[Count of New Neighbourhoods],
ALLEXCEPT ( LocationTable, LocationTable[State] )
) <= 5,
1,
0
)What this does is it will look at your count of new neighbourhoods on the state-level. If it is less than or equal to 5, it returns a 1, else a 0
Proud to be a Super User! | |
Thank you! This mostly seems to work - however, I do want the option to use this logic with slicers involving other fields, is that possible? Since it's less than I think it should work for this use case, but what if I was doing greater than?
Check out the May 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.
Sign up to receive a private message when registration opens and key events begin.
If you have recently started exploring Fabric, we'd love to hear how it's going. Your feedback can help with product improvements.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 31 | |
| 26 | |
| 23 | |
| 22 | |
| 15 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 63 | |
| 45 | |
| 28 | |
| 24 | |
| 22 |