How to copy an HTML table to CSV in Chrome without manual cleanup
If you keep copying tables from websites into Excel and then spending ten minutes fixing broken rows, this is the workflow that removes the cleanup step.
Practical guides for copying web tables into CSV, Excel, Sheets, Markdown, Notion, and Airtable-ready workflows.
The highest-leverage guide for turning a messy browser table into clean structured data fast.
If you keep copying tables from websites into Excel and then spending ten minutes fixing broken rows, this is the workflow that removes the cleanup step.
Focused walkthroughs for export formats, pricing tables, documentation workflows, and repeated capture jobs.
If Google Sheets gives you a blank result, a single-column paste, or a table that falls apart on import, this is the browser workflow that keeps the structure intact.
JSON sounds technical, but for many table jobs it is just the easiest way to stop moving data cell by cell between a webpage and the next system.
The hard part is usually not copying one table. It is collecting five related tables, or ten pages of the same table, and ending up with one result that still makes sense.
Airtable is great once the data is clean. The painful part is usually the trip from a messy webpage into a base that expects something more structured.
Markdown is the format you want when the destination is a doc, a README, or a Notion page instead of a spreadsheet.
Pricing tables are one of the most common web-table workflows, and one of the easiest to ruin with ordinary copy-paste.