Learn how to split a price table into two separate tables at any line item. This guide shows you how to break a pricing table at a chosen point, creating two independent tables on the same page or on a new page using the Split Into New Table or Split Into New Page options.
Yes. You can split a price table at any specific line item. Right-click the line item where you want the break and choose the "Split Into New Table" option to create the split at that exact point.
All items above the selected line remain in the original price table, and all items below the split point move into the new price table. The new table will contain only the items below the break, preserving item order and details.
Yes. Use the "Split Into New Page" option to place the items below the split point onto a brand‑new page. The original table stays on the current page while the remainder becomes a separate table on the new page.
Yes. After you split a table, each resulting table acts independently — you can edit, reorder, style, or apply settings to each table separately. They behave like separate price tables in the document until you choose to merge them.
Yes. You can immediately undo a split with the undo action, or later recombine tables using the Merge Pricing Tables feature to return them to a single table when needed.
Yes. You may repeat the split action at different line items to break a single price table into multiple smaller tables, either on the same page or across new pages using the "Split Into New Table" or "Split Into New Page" options.
Each resulting table maintains its own subtotal and recalculates any linked taxes or line calculations based on the items it contains. Totals and tax amounts will therefore reflect the contents of each separate table.
If you later merge tables, totals and tax calculations will be recomputed for the combined table. Always review subtotals and tax settings after splitting or merging to ensure document accuracy.
Splitting price tables makes long quotes and proposals easier to organise: you can separate sections (for example, products vs services or hardware vs labor), place follow‑on items on a new page, or present cleaner, client‑friendly pricing blocks. This improves readability and helps prospects select options more quickly.
These capabilities integrate smoothly into modern sales quoting software and sales proposal software workflows—making quote software and proposal software documents more modular and easier to manage, style, and sync with integrations (for example, invoicing or accounting systems).