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Anonymous
Not applicable

Link to File Excel in Service

HI, 

 

I was hoping someone could help me please! 

 

I'm getting an error when trying to link to an excel workbook that has more than 8 tables and keep getting this error! 

 

JMW_87_0-1740586824494.png

 

I can't find anything online about this error and i'm stumped as to why this happens. 

 

Thanks!

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
johnsebastian97
Frequent Visitor

Power BI Service typically scans Excel workbooks for 'Named Tables' (i.e., each named range or table in your workbook). If your workbook contains more than 8 such named tables, you’ll see the “Too many tables to load” error.

When you use Power BI Service directly (via “Get Data” → “Files” → “Local” or SharePoint/OneDrive), it enforces stricter limits than when you use Power BI Desktop. The service’s Excel connector is designed for relatively simple files, so once you exceed 8 tables, it stops you from continuing.

If you need all 8+ tables, the easiest way is to bypass the service’s limitation by using Power BI Desktop:

  1. Import Your Excel File
    • Open Power BI Desktop.
    • Go to Get DataExcel and choose your workbook.
  2. Select All Necessary Tables
    • You can select as many tables (named ranges) as you need, transform them in the Power Query Editor, and build relationships.
  3. Publish to Power BI Service
    • After modeling, go to HomePublish.
    • Choose your workspace in the Power BI Service.
    • This way, you’re not restricted by the 8-table limit in the initial data import, because Desktop handles the data modeling. The published dataset in the service can include more than 8 tables without an error.

View solution in original post

1 REPLY 1
johnsebastian97
Frequent Visitor

Power BI Service typically scans Excel workbooks for 'Named Tables' (i.e., each named range or table in your workbook). If your workbook contains more than 8 such named tables, you’ll see the “Too many tables to load” error.

When you use Power BI Service directly (via “Get Data” → “Files” → “Local” or SharePoint/OneDrive), it enforces stricter limits than when you use Power BI Desktop. The service’s Excel connector is designed for relatively simple files, so once you exceed 8 tables, it stops you from continuing.

If you need all 8+ tables, the easiest way is to bypass the service’s limitation by using Power BI Desktop:

  1. Import Your Excel File
    • Open Power BI Desktop.
    • Go to Get DataExcel and choose your workbook.
  2. Select All Necessary Tables
    • You can select as many tables (named ranges) as you need, transform them in the Power Query Editor, and build relationships.
  3. Publish to Power BI Service
    • After modeling, go to HomePublish.
    • Choose your workspace in the Power BI Service.
    • This way, you’re not restricted by the 8-table limit in the initial data import, because Desktop handles the data modeling. The published dataset in the service can include more than 8 tables without an error.

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