Free .pbiviz Generator

Download a Bullet Chart .pbiviz file for Power BI

Download a Bullet Chart .pbiviz for Power BI. AI-generated, source code included, free trial credits to start. No marketplace seat fees.

A .pbiviz is the file format Power BI uses for custom visuals — a packaged TypeScript visual including capabilities.json (data role definitions), visual.ts (rendering logic), settings.ts (formatting-pane options), and a compiled bundle. Importing one into Power BI Desktop is straightforward (Visualizations pane → three-dot menu → Import a visual from a file). The harder question is where to get a .pbiviz that does exactly what you want.

If you've searched "Bullet Chart pbiviz download free", you've probably hit AppSource (most options paid; free tiers limited) or GitHub repos (mixed quality; often un-maintained; rarely the exact visual you described). The third option — generate a custom .pbiviz from a description, free up to your trial credits — exists and most people haven't tried it yet.

VizForge generates the .pbiviz on demand from a plain-English prompt. The output is a standard Power BI custom visual: same .pbiviz extension, same import path, same Power BI compatibility (Desktop, Service, Premium, Embedded). The TypeScript source ships with the file, so the visual is yours to extend or modify forever.

Step-by-step

  1. 1

    Describe the bullet chart you need

    Specify the data shape (which columns the visual will consume), the styling (colours, fonts, border radius), and the formatting-pane options users should be able to adjust. Two-three paragraphs of description usually produces a near-final visual on first generation.

  2. 2

    Generate and review

    Click Generate. The pipeline runs in 1-3 minutes for fresh visuals. You see a live preview while the build runs. If the result isn't quite right, click Refine and describe the change — each refinement is a small diff, not a regeneration.

  3. 3

    Download the .pbiviz

    Click Download in the workspace. The browser saves a .pbiviz file (~50-200 KB depending on visual complexity). The TypeScript source is also available as a separate download if you want to edit the visual yourself later.

  4. 4

    Import into Power BI Desktop

    In Power BI Desktop: Visualizations pane → three-dot menu → Import a visual from a file → select the .pbiviz. The bullet chart appears in your visualisations gallery; click to add it to the page.

  5. 5

    Bind data and publish

    Drop your fields onto the data wells exposed by the visual. Adjust formatting in the standard formatting pane. Save the .pbix and publish to Power BI Service when ready — the bullet chart renders identically in the browser.

The AI alternative: Generate a free bullet chart .pbiviz on the trial plan — 5 credits on signup, no card required. Source code included.

Generate a bullet chart on VizForge →

When to use a bullet chart

  • Executive KPI scorecards (5-10 KPIs in a grid)
  • Sales attainment across reps or regions
  • OKR check-ins with target and stretch ranges
  • Service-level dashboards with threshold bands
  • Budget vs. actual reports with variance ranges

Frequently asked questions

How big is the typical .pbiviz file?

Generated .pbiviz files are 50-200 KB for most visual types — comparable in size to AppSource visuals. The .pbiviz is a zip-archive containing the compiled JavaScript bundle, the capabilities.json, and metadata.

Will the .pbiviz work after Power BI's monthly updates?

Yes. The Power BI Visuals SDK has strong backwards compatibility within major versions. VizForge generates against API 5.11+; .pbiviz files generated today will continue working through Power BI's 2026-2027 update cycle.

Is the source code really included?

Yes. Every download includes the full TypeScript source (visual.ts, settings.ts, style.less, capabilities.json). You can open the project in VS Code, edit it, rebuild with `pbiviz package`, and reimport. There's no obfuscation or licence-key gating.

How many bullets fit on a page?

Comfortably 10-15 in a 2-column layout. The visual's compact height makes it the best way to show many KPIs at once.

Bands hard-coded or measure-driven?

Either. For dynamic bands (thresholds that shift as targets change), pass three measures and the visual redraws the background.

Vertical or horizontal?

Both. Horizontal is the canonical Stephen Few design, but prompt for 'vertical bullet' if you need a column layout.

Can it show a comparison marker?

Yes — specify a 'prior period' measure and the visual adds a second tick for context.

Other guides for the bullet chart

Same visual, different angle — pick the one that matches what you’re trying to do.

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