What Is a Violin Plot?

This chart turns structured data into a visual pattern that is faster to scan than a raw table.

Use it when the reader should understand shape, comparison, distribution, proportion, or movement quickly.

Start With the Raw Data

Most charts begin with a small, structured table before the visual layer is added:

Label Value A Value B
Example 1 24 31
Example 2 30 28
Example 3 18 36

The raw values stay the same, but the visual structure makes patterns easier to spot: highs, lows, clusters, gaps, and unusual changes.

What This Chart Helps You See

Business reporting
Operational monitoring
Decision support

Common Ways to Use a Violin Plot

  • Explain a business dataset more clearly than a plain table.
  • Show comparison, trend, distribution, or relationships depending on the chart type.
  • Support dashboards, reports, SEO articles, and stakeholder presentations.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I trim the number of values?

Too many points overwhelm viewers. Keep x-axis labels readable and rumble the data into summary points when possible.

How to Use the Live Example Below

Change the editable cells in the live example and save to see how the chart responds.

Shape of the Distribution

Violin plots combine a density curve with symmetry, making it easy to see where values cluster.

Live Demo: Editable Density Shape

Instructions: Change the positive density to reshape the violin.

Position 
Density 
Mirror 
Inserted values
Updated values
Deleted values
-30.05-0.05
-20.12-0.12
-10.20-0.2
00.28-0.28
10.20-0.2
20.12-0.12
30.05-0.05
Preview changes
Save changes
Cancel changes
The Violin Distribution Shape chart showing Positive series, Negative series.

When to Use Violin Plots

  • When you want to show distribution shape.
  • When comparing shape across groups.
  • When a box plot feels too limited.