monday.com Gantt Chart Setup: A Consultant’s Complete Guide
monday.com Certified Consultants

monday.com Gantt Chart Setup: A Consultant’s Complete Guide

Dependencies, milestones, baselines, and the five problems we fix most often.

Getting your monday.com Gantt chart setup right is one of those things that looks simple until you actually try to use it for a real project. The view loads fine, bars appear on the screen, and then you realize dependencies aren’t shifting dates the way you expected, milestones aren’t visible, or half your items are missing entirely. We set up Gantt charts for project teams every week as certified monday.com consultants, and the same handful of configuration mistakes come up over and over. This guide walks through the complete setup process, from board prerequisites through advanced features like baselines and critical path, plus the five most common problems and exactly how to fix each one.

🎯 What You Need Before You Start

The number one reason a monday.com Gantt chart looks wrong is that the board wasn’t set up correctly before the view was added. Here is what you need in place first.

A Timeline column (not just a Date column). This is the most common mistake we see. A Date column gives you a single point in time, so items show up as tiny dots on the chart. A Timeline column stores a start date and an end date, which is what creates the horizontal bars that make a Gantt chart useful. If you are managing a project with task durations, you need the Timeline column.

Dates filled in for every item. Items without dates in their Timeline column simply won’t appear on the Gantt. If your chart looks half-empty, check that every task has both a start and end date populated.

A People column for ownership. Not strictly required for the Gantt itself, but the Gantt view lets you color-code bars by person. Without it, you lose one of the most useful visual cues for spotting overloaded team members.

Groups organized by project phase or workstream. The Gantt view inherits your board’s group structure. Items within the same group cluster together visually. If your groups are random, the Gantt will look random too.

💡 Consultant Tip If your board currently uses Date columns and you want to switch to Timeline columns, you can’t convert one to the other directly. Create a new Timeline column, then use a batch update (or a quick Make.com scenario) to copy dates into the new column. Need help building automations like this? Check out our post on monday.com automation vs Make.com for guidance on which tool fits.

📊 How to Add the monday.com Gantt Chart View

Once your board is ready, adding the Gantt view takes about 30 seconds.

Step 1: Open the board where your project lives. Click the + icon next to your existing views at the top of the board.

Step 2: Search for “Gantt” and select it. monday.com will auto-detect your Timeline column. If you have multiple Timeline columns, it will ask which one to use.

Step 3: Your Gantt chart renders immediately. Each item appears as a horizontal bar spanning its start and end dates. Groups are color-coded and collapsible.

From here, open the Gantt settings (the gear icon in the top-right of the view) to customize what you see. You can change bar coloring to reflect status, person, or group. You can toggle labels on or off. And you can adjust the zoom level from days to weeks to months.

🔗 Configuring Dependencies for Your monday.com Gantt Chart Setup

Dependencies are what turn a Gantt chart from a pretty timeline into an actual project management tool. Without them, moving one task’s dates has zero effect on the tasks that follow it.

Step 1: Add the Dependency column. Click the + icon to the right of your last column, select “More columns,” and search for “Dependency.” You can only have one Dependency column per board.

Step 2: Choose your dependency mode. A popup immediately asks you to pick between Flexible, Strict, or No Action. This choice matters significantly (see the next section for a decision framework).

Step 3: Select the time column. Point the Dependency column at your Timeline column. If you have multiple Timeline or Date columns, pick the one the Gantt view uses.

Step 4: Link dependent items. Click into any cell in the Dependency column. A sidebar opens where you select the item(s) that must finish before this item can start. Repeat for every task relationship in your project.

Once dependencies are set, arrow lines appear on the Gantt connecting predecessor items to their dependents. This is also where features like critical path and baseline tracking become available.

⚠️ Important The Dependency column does NOT auto-populate dates. You still need to manually enter start and end dates for every item. Dependencies control what happens when those dates change, not the initial values.

🎯 Which Dependency Mode Should You Use?

Most guides list the three modes and move on. But picking the wrong mode is one of the most common reasons teams give up on Gantt charts entirely. Here is when to use each one.

Flexible

Prevents date overlap between dependent items. Does not auto-shift dates when a predecessor changes. Best for teams that want visual warnings about scheduling conflicts but prefer to adjust dates manually.

Strict

Auto-shifts dependent item dates by the exact same amount when a predecessor changes. The full chain stays synchronized. Best for teams running waterfall or sequential projects where the schedule must cascade automatically.

No Action

Shows dependency arrows on the Gantt but never moves dates. Best for teams that want to visualize task relationships without any automatic date changes, like creative or agile teams tracking loose sequences.

📋 Our recommendation For most project teams we work with, Strict mode is the right starting point. It is the only mode that actually manages your project schedule for you. If you find it too aggressive (moving dates you didn’t want moved), switch to Flexible. No Action is useful for visualization only, but it defeats the core purpose of dependencies. If your team manages workload capacity across the team, Strict mode helps keep the workload view accurate too.

🏁 Setting Up Milestones and Critical Path

Milestones and critical path are Pro and Enterprise features that give you real project intelligence on top of the basic Gantt view.

Milestones

A milestone is a single date that represents a key project moment: a go-live date, a client review deadline, a regulatory filing date. On the Gantt, milestones appear as diamond shapes instead of bars.

To create a milestone, set a Timeline column entry where the start date equals the end date (zero duration). monday.com automatically renders it as a diamond. You can also mark items as milestones through the Gantt settings panel by toggling the milestone option for specific items.

Critical Path

The critical path is the longest chain of dependent tasks in your project. If any task on the critical path slips, the entire project end date slips with it.

To enable it, open Gantt settings and toggle “Critical Path” on. monday.com highlights the critical chain in red. This only works if you have dependencies configured between items. No dependencies means no chain to analyze, which means no critical path.

💡 Consultant Tip Critical path calculates per connected dependency chain. If you have two separate groups of tasks with no dependencies between them, you will see two separate critical paths. To get a single project-wide critical path, every task sequence needs to connect back to a common predecessor or successor.

Need Help Setting Up Your Gantt Chart?

We configure monday.com project boards every week. Book a free discovery call and we will walk through your setup together.

Book a Free Discovery Call

📐 Using Baselines to Track Schedule Drift

A baseline is a snapshot of your project’s planned schedule at a specific point in time. After you set the baseline, you can compare current dates against the original plan and see exactly where slippage has occurred.

How to set a baseline: Open your Gantt view, click “Baseline” in the toolbar at the top, and select “Add a new snapshot.” monday.com captures every item’s current dates. As the project progresses and dates shift, the original baseline bars appear as faded outlines behind the current bars.

You can take multiple baseline snapshots over the life of a project. This is useful for re-baselining after a significant scope change while still keeping the original plan visible for comparison.

📋 When to take a baseline Take your first baseline the moment the project plan is approved and all dates are locked in. Take additional baselines after any approved scope change, phase completion, or major schedule renegotiation. Baselines are available on Pro and Enterprise plans.

⚖️ Gantt View vs. Gantt Dashboard Widget

monday.com gives you two ways to display a Gantt chart, and they serve different purposes.

📋 Board Gantt View

  • Shows items from a single board
  • Supports dependencies, milestones, critical path, and baselines
  • Lets you drag items to change dates directly on the chart
  • Best for day-to-day project management within one board

📊 Dashboard Gantt Widget

  • Pulls items from multiple boards onto one chart
  • Can group by board, status, person, or custom columns
  • Does not support drag-to-reschedule
  • Best for portfolio-level views and stakeholder reporting

A common pattern we set up for clients is to use the board-level Gantt view for the project team that manages tasks daily, and a dashboard Gantt widget for leadership that needs to see all active projects on a single screen. If you’ve already built dashboards for your team, our guide on fixing dashboard display issues covers the most common widget problems.

⚠️ Known limitation Mirrored Timeline columns from connected boards may not render correctly in the dashboard Gantt widget, especially on shared links. If you need a multi-board Gantt for external stakeholders, test the shared link before distributing it.

📊 Plan Tier Feature Matrix

Not every Gantt feature is available on every plan. Here is the full breakdown so you know exactly what you are getting.

Feature Standard ($12/seat/mo) Pro ($19/seat/mo) Enterprise (custom)
Gantt board view
Gantt dashboard widget
Dependencies (all modes)
Milestones 🚫
Critical path 🚫
Baselines 🚫
Subitems in Gantt
Cross-project dependencies 🚫 🚫
PDF export (up to 640 items)

If your team is on the Standard plan and hitting limitations, the Pro upgrade unlocks milestones, critical path, and baselines, which are the features that turn the Gantt from a visual timeline into a real scheduling tool. For organizations managing dependencies across multiple boards (common in construction, engineering, and large IT rollouts), cross-project dependencies on the Enterprise plan are worth evaluating.

🔧 5 Common monday.com Gantt Chart Problems and Fixes

These are the five issues we troubleshoot most often during our monday.com consulting engagements.

1 Items Missing from the Gantt Chart

Symptom: Some items on your board don’t appear in the Gantt view at all.

Root cause: Items without dates in the Timeline column won’t render. This also happens when a board-level or view-level filter is hiding certain groups, statuses, or people.

Fix: Switch back to the main table view and check that every item has both a start and end date in the Timeline column. Then open the Gantt view’s filter panel and remove or adjust any active filters. Also check that collapsed groups aren’t hiding items from the chart.

2 Dependencies Not Shifting Dates

Symptom: You change a predecessor’s dates but the dependent items don’t move.

Root cause: The Dependency column is set to “Flexible” or “No Action” mode. Flexible prevents overlap but does not cascade date changes. No Action does nothing at all.

Fix: Click the column header of the Dependency column, open “Column settings,” and switch to Strict mode. Note that you cannot use batch actions to update dates when in Flexible or Strict mode. Changes must be made one item at a time. If you need to do bulk date changes, temporarily switch to No Action mode, update the dates, then switch back.

3 Critical Path Not Displaying

Symptom: You toggled Critical Path on in settings but nothing highlights in red.

Root cause: Critical path requires at least one chain of dependencies. If no items are linked via the Dependency column, there is no path to calculate. This also happens when dependencies only exist within individual groups but not between groups.

Fix: Ensure your Dependency column has actual item links configured. For a project-wide critical path, at least one dependency chain should span from the project’s first task to its last task. If your tasks naturally split into parallel workstreams, that’s fine, but at least one workstream needs end-to-end dependencies for critical path to show up.

4 Dependencies Slow to Recalculate

Symptom: After changing a date, dependent items take 30 seconds to a minute (or longer) to update.

Root cause: Large boards with many dependency chains can cause slow recalculation. monday.com processes dependency shifts server-side, and complex chains with dozens of linked items take longer.

Fix: There is no setting to force faster recalculation. The practical fix is to keep dependency chains lean. If your board has 200+ items all in a single dependency chain, consider breaking the project into multiple boards (one per phase) and using a dashboard Gantt widget for the combined view. You can also reduce chain length by only linking items that have a true finish-to-start relationship rather than linking everything sequentially.

5 Gantt PDF Export Cutting Off Items

Symptom: When exporting the Gantt to PDF, some items or time periods are missing.

Root cause: The PDF export is capped at 640 items and a 10-year timeline window. If your board exceeds either limit, the export silently truncates.

Fix: Filter the Gantt view to show only the items you need before exporting. If you routinely need exports for large portfolios, use the dashboard Gantt widget (which connects multiple smaller boards) rather than one massive board. You can also narrow the date range by filtering out completed items from past years. For more on managing large boards, our workspace structure guide covers how to split projects across boards without losing visibility.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What monday.com plan do I need for the Gantt chart?
The Gantt chart view and widget are available on the Standard plan and above ($12/seat/month billed annually). Milestones, critical path, and baselines require the Pro plan ($19/seat/month) or Enterprise. Cross-project dependencies are Enterprise only.
Can I use a Date column instead of a Timeline column for the Gantt chart?
Technically yes, but with significant limitations. A Date column only gives you a single point in time, so items appear as dots rather than bars. For a useful Gantt chart with task durations and dependencies, you need a Timeline column that stores both a start and end date.
Why are some items missing from my Gantt chart?
Items without dates in the Timeline column won’t appear on the Gantt. Check that every item has both a start and end date populated. Also verify that no board-level or view-level filters are hiding items, and that collapsed groups aren’t excluding tasks from the display.
What is the difference between Flexible and Strict dependency modes?
Flexible mode prevents date overlap between dependent items but does not auto-shift dates when you reschedule a predecessor. Strict mode automatically shifts dependent item dates by the exact same amount when a predecessor changes, keeping the full chain synchronized. No Action mode shows dependency arrows but never moves dates.
Can I show items from multiple boards on one Gantt chart?
Yes. Use the Gantt dashboard widget instead of the board view. Add it to a dashboard, connect multiple boards, and group items by board, status, person, or any other column. The dashboard widget does not support drag-to-reschedule or editing dependencies directly.
Why is my critical path not showing?
Critical path requires dependencies to be set between items. If no dependencies exist, there is no chain of tasks to analyze. You also need a Pro or Enterprise plan. Additionally, critical path calculates per connected dependency chain, so items in separate groups without cross-group dependencies will show separate paths.
Is there a limit to how many items the Gantt chart can display?
The Gantt view itself does not have a hard item cap for display, but exporting to PDF is limited to 640 items and a 10-year timeline window. For very large boards, performance may degrade. Consider filtering to active items or splitting into multiple boards connected via a dashboard widget.

Let Us Build Your Project Gantt

We will configure your boards, set up dependencies in the right mode, and make sure your Gantt chart actually reflects reality. Book a free call to get started.

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