Spreadsheets allow you to make sense of complex sets of numbers quickly. In this post, we’ll give you the skills to find the smallest value in your data while filtering the values before you evaluate them. We’ll use a real-world example of examining inventory. We have a list of Prices
in column A
and a list of their Status
in column B
.

We want to find the lowest price for our In Stock
items. Therefore, we need a way to filter the values so we can only consider those In stock
before we look at the prices.

=MINA(FILTER(A2:A6, B2:B6="In Stock"))
This formula combines the MINA function with the FILTER function in Google Sheets.
Here’s how it works step-by-step:
- The
FILTER
function evaluates the rangeA2:B6
and includes the rows where the text inB2:B6
is “In Stock
.” - This filtered range of values from column
A
is then passed as the argument to theMINA
function. MINA
will then find the minimum value across that filtered range from columnA
.
So, in essence, this formula is:
- Identifying the products that are “
In Stock
” by looking at the values in columnB
- Taking only the prices for those in-stock products from column
A
- And then finding the lowest price from that filtered set of in-stock prices
This can be useful when determining the minimum value, but only for a specific subset of the data. In this case, it’s finding the lowest price among the In-stock
items.
The FILTER
function allows you to apply conditional logic to select the relevant data before passing it to MINA
(or other functions). This makes the MINA
result more targeted and meaningful.
Make a copy of the spreadsheet used in this example to adapt the formulas to your spreadsheet.
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