Venn Diagram Generator
Name every overlap. Edit every circle in PowerPoint forever.
How to use the Venn diagram generator
A Venn diagram is the fastest way to show how two or three things relate — what they have in common, what's unique to each, and where everything overlaps at once. This tool gives you a clean, browser-based way to build a venn diagram design and export it for a slide deck, report, or whiteboard session.
Steps to build your diagram
- Pick 2 or 3 circles with the toggle at the top of the left panel. Two circles compare a pair; three circles reveal the central "sweet spot" where all three meet.
- Choose a color theme. Modern Infographic is the colorful default; Vibrant reads boldly from the back of a room; Pastel is soft and slide-friendly; Corporate is cool and professional. The theme sets each circle's starting color and opacity.
- Name each circle. Type a label in its card on the left, or click the label directly on the diagram to rename it in place.
- Name the overlaps. Give each intersection region a label — the shared goal, the common feature, the trade-off — so the diagram tells the whole story on its own.
- Fine-tune the look. Adjust each circle's color and opacity, and drag the overlap-amount slider to control how much the circles intersect. The composition stays balanced and centered automatically.
- Export. Download a PNG for free, or upgrade to Pro for an editable PowerPoint, a vector SVG for print, or copy-to-clipboard that pastes straight into PowerPoint, Keynote, Figma, or Google Slides.
Why name the overlap regions
The overlap is the whole point of a Venn diagram, yet most quick mockups leave the intersections blank. Labeling them — "shared customers", "joint OKRs", "the ideal candidate", "on time and on budget" — turns a generic graphic into an argument. This tool treats overlap labels as first-class content: you can name the AB, AC, BC, and ABC regions and edit them inline on the canvas, so the diagram communicates without a caption.
Use cases
Venn diagrams work anywhere relationships matter:
- Product teams — compare features across plans, or find the overlap between user needs and technical feasibility.
- Marketers — map shared audiences across channels and spot where campaigns reinforce each other.
- Strategy decks — frame the three-circle "quality, speed, cost" or "desirable, feasible, viable" trade-offs.
- Educators — illustrate set theory, shared traits, and compare-and-contrast lessons.
- Recruiters and HR — show where skills, culture, and availability intersect for the ideal hire.
- Founders and analysts — position a product against competitors by what each does and does not share.
Because the export stays editable in PowerPoint, the diagram you build here becomes a starting point you can keep refining inside your deck.
Prefer to build it in PowerPoint?
If you'd rather assemble the diagram natively inside your deck — using PowerPoint's own SmartArt, shape Merge tools, and transparency controls — we have a full step-by-step walkthrough: how to make a Venn diagram in PowerPoint. It's the better route when you want every circle to live as a native PowerPoint shape from the start. Many people do both: rough out the labels and overlaps here for speed, export the editable PPTX, then fine-tune inside PowerPoint following that guide.