Dashboards are a powerful tool within your HubSpot portal. They are where teams can track KPIs and align around a single truth. If used correctly, they provide your team with valuable information. But if you don’t know how to use them, they can turn into a graveyard of data and charts no one quite knows what to do with.
This blog walks through what HubSpot dashboards do, how to use them at a basic level and our review of their effectiveness.
A dashboard in HubSpot is a customizable page that displays multiple reports. It lets you:
Dashboards sit under Reporting → Dashboards and are available across all products and plans, with limits on the number of dashboards and access to custom reporting varying by plan.
The dashboards themselves are free/ubiquitous; the complexity comes from the reports you put on them. This is dictated by your tier.
You can add:
The visualization type (line, bar, table, funnel, etc.) is dictated by the report itself, not the actual dashboard.
If someone is new to dashboards, this is an easy way to get started.
Go to:
Reporting → Dashboards → Create dashboard
You can start from scratch or use a template. HubSpot provides its own recommended dashboards for marketing performance, service, web and sales.
Give the dashboard a name and choose its visibility (private, everyone or specific users/teams on Enterprise), and you’re ready to add reports.
There are three main options:
Once added, you’re free to resize and rearrange reports on the dashboard with drag and drop.
Dashboard filters are powerful but not universal and apply only to reports built on the same primary object or dataset.
You can add Advanced filters and Quick filters that control things like:
However:
So dashboard filters are great, but not magic. They won’t override every report.
From the dashboard’s Manage access settings, you can control who sees what:
This matters a lot if you’re building dashboards for leadership versus frontline teams. It gives you needed flexibility.
Once you have a useful dashboard, you can share it without asking people to log in and hunt for it.
HubSpot supports:
Dashboards pull in reports from across the CRM: contacts, deals, tickets, companies, activities and more. That makes them ideal for full team alignment.
For example:
You don’t need a separate dashboarding tool just to view basic performance metrics.
These dashboards are relatively simple to build. Anyone on your team should be able to create a dashboard from scratch, provided they know which reports to add. HubSpot provides its own lessons on reporting dashboards that should help you get started.
Because dashboards can be favorited, set as your default view, emailed and pushed into Slack/Chat, they work well as daily/weekly check-ins for your team. You can create dashboards like:
This helps your teams stay aligned and informed.
For most Pro and Enterprise hubs, you can embed external content like Google Slides, Sheets, YouTube or other web content directly on a dashboard.
That means you can:
There are limitations (some script-heavy tools don’t embed cleanly), but it’s a genuinely useful feature that offers greater flexibility.
Dashboards don’t introduce new math; they just display reports and rely on the underlying report or dataset for all calculated fields. If you want:
…you’re still building that in individual reports, external BI or spreadsheets, not at the dashboard level.
As mentioned earlier:
This can lead to confusion when some tiles change with filters and others don’t
For most teams: Yes.
Dashboards in HubSpot are not trying to reinvent reporting and they shouldn’t. Their job is more straightforward.
They give teams a shared, accessible view of the metrics that matter, built directly on top of the CRM.
They’re especially useful when:
Where they fall short (advanced modeling, deep cohort analysis) is exactly where other data tools are supposed to pick up the slack.
If your team is already using HubSpot but hasn’t invested time in curating a small set of reliable dashboards, you’re probably leaving an easy win on the table.