On its own, Google Sheets makes bullets feel like a hack. You juggle ALT codes, custom formats, and line breaks just to get a simple list looking right. That is fine for one column, but painful when you are managing dozens of client trackers, content calendars, or sales pipelines that all need clean, scannable bullets. This is where an AI computer agent changes the game. Instead of teaching every teammate the same tricky steps, you teach the agent once. It opens Google Sheets, applies your preferred bullet style, and keeps everything consistent across tabs, files, and even accounts. Delegating this to an AI agent frees your brain for strategy while it quietly standardizes formatting at scale, turns messy imports into readable lists, and removes yet another tiny but constant drag on your attention.
If you run a business, agency, or sales team, your Google Sheets are probably bursting with lists: talking points, campaign ideas, next steps, lead notes. Without structure, those cells turn into a wall of text that everybody quietly avoids.
Bullet points fix that. They turn chaos into a quick scan: what matters, what changed, what to do next. The catch? Google Sheets does not have a native "bulleted list" button like Docs. You have to get a little creative.
Below are the most useful manual methods, followed by how a Simular AI computer agent can take over and do this at scale.
This is the fastest way when you are working in just a few cells.
On Windows (with numeric keypad):
Alt and type 7 on the numeric keypad.On Mac:
Option + 8 to insert •.Pros
Cons
Sometimes you want a mini checklist inside a single cell (for a lead, a project, or a client).
On Mac:
Option + 8 to add a bullet.Control + Enter to move to a new line inside the same cell.On Windows:
Alt + 0149 (numeric keypad) or Alt + 7 to add a bullet.Alt + Enter to start a new line in the same cell.Pros
Cons
When you want bullets across a whole column, custom formats are your friend.
Format → Number → More formats → Custom number format.• @Apply.Now every cell in that range shows a bullet followed by the cell content.
Pros
Cons
For formula-driven sheets, you can generate bullets with CHAR.
=CHAR(8226) & " " & A2This pulls text from A2, prefixes it with a bullet (•), and outputs a clean, formatted line.
Pros
Cons
All the methods above work. But if you are:
then formatting becomes a quiet tax on your time.
With Simular Pro, you can spin up an AI computer agent that uses your desktop the way a human would:
Pros of the AI-driven approach
Cons
In short, manual methods are perfect when you are hands-on in a single sheet. When your job is running teams and processes, it is far more powerful to let a Simular AI agent own the formatting, so you can own the strategy.
For a single bullet inside one Google Sheets cell, use keyboard shortcuts. On Windows with a numeric keypad, double‑click the cell, then press Alt + 7. On Mac, double‑click the cell, then press Option + 8. A • will appear at the cursor, and you can immediately type your text afterward. This is ideal for quick notes or lightweight lists without setting up formats or formulas.
To keep multiple bulleted items in one cell, combine bullets with line breaks. On Windows, double‑click the cell, use Alt + 7 or Alt + 0149 for a bullet, type your text, then press Alt + Enter to add a new line. Repeat bullet + text + Alt + Enter for each item. On Mac, use Option + 8 for the bullet and Control + Enter for the line break. Press Enter to finish.
Use a custom number format to add bullets to a whole range. Enter your text normally, then select the column or range. Go to Format → Number → More formats → Custom number format. In the box, type • @ and click Apply. Every cell in that range will display a bullet followed by its contents, without changing the underlying data. New values in that range will also automatically show with bullets.
Yes. Use the CHAR function inside a formula. In a helper column, enter =CHAR(8226) & " " & A2, where A2 is the cell with your text. This outputs a bullet (•) plus a space and the original content. Drag the formula down to apply it to more rows. This is especially useful when your data is imported or computed and you want the bullets to update automatically when source data changes.
Automation makes sense when you repeat the same bullet formatting across many sheets, clients, or time periods. If you regularly import data, then spend minutes or hours applying bullets, line breaks, and custom formats, an AI computer agent like Simular can take over. Teach it the exact steps once, verify on a test file, then let it run on demand or via webhook so new Google Sheets are formatted automatically without manual effort.