This post is a part of the PL-300: Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst Exam Prep Hub; and this topic falls under these sections:
Visualize and analyze the data (25–30%)
--> Enhance reports for usability and storytelling
--> Design Reports for Mobile Devices
Note that there are 10 practice questions (with answers and explanations) at the end of each topic. Also, there are 2 practice tests with 60 questions each available on the hub below all the exam topics.
Overview
Designing reports for mobile devices is a critical skill assessed in the PL-300: Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst certification exam. As more business users consume reports on phones and tablets, Power BI provides dedicated tools to ensure reports remain readable, performant, and user-friendly on smaller screens.
For the exam, you are expected to understand when and how to design mobile-optimized report layouts, how they differ from standard report pages, and best practices for usability.
Why Mobile Report Design Matters
Desktop reports often contain:
- Multiple visuals per page
- Wide layouts
- Dense detail
On mobile devices, these designs can become:
- Hard to read
- Difficult to interact with
- Slow to load
Power BI solves this by allowing authors to create dedicated mobile layouts that optimize:
- Screen space
- Touch interactions
- Visual clarity
Power BI Mobile Layouts
Mobile Layout Feature
Power BI Desktop includes a Mobile layout view, which allows you to design a separate layout specifically for phones.
Key points:
- Mobile layouts do not replace desktop layouts
- They are optional but recommended
- They apply when users view reports in the Power BI mobile app
To access:
View → Mobile layout
How Mobile Layouts Work
- The mobile canvas is narrow and vertical
- You manually select and place visuals
- Visuals not added to the mobile layout won’t appear on mobile
- Each report page can have its own mobile design
This gives report authors full control over:
- Visual order
- Size
- Priority of information
Best Practices for Mobile Report Design
1. Prioritize Key Insights
Mobile screens support fewer visuals. Focus on:
- KPIs
- Summary metrics
- High-level trends
Avoid overcrowding the page.
2. Use Single-Column Layouts
Vertical scrolling works best on mobile devices.
- Stack visuals vertically
- Avoid side-by-side layouts
3. Optimize Visual Types
Mobile-friendly visuals include:
- KPI cards
- Line charts
- Bar/column charts
- Simple tables
Avoid:
- Large matrices
- Highly detailed visuals
- Small text-heavy charts
4. Increase Font and Element Size
Touch-based interaction requires:
- Larger fonts
- Bigger buttons
- More spacing between visuals
5. Limit Slicers
Too many slicers reduce usability.
Recommended:
- Use dropdown slicers
- Place slicers at the top of the page
- Consider using sync slicers for consistency
Interactions and Navigation on Mobile
- Visual interactions (cross-filtering/highlighting) still apply
- Drill-through works but should be clearly indicated
- Bookmarks and buttons can be used but must be large enough for touch
- Tooltips are supported but should be concise
Performance Considerations
Mobile devices often have:
- Less processing power
- Slower network connections
To improve performance:
- Reduce the number of visuals per page
- Avoid complex DAX calculations where possible
- Limit high-cardinality visuals
Publishing and Testing Mobile Reports
After publishing:
- Test reports using the Power BI mobile app
- Verify layout consistency across devices
- Confirm slicers, filters, and interactions behave as expected
Power BI Desktop does not emulate device-specific behavior, so real testing is essential.
Key Exam Concepts to Remember
For PL-300, be prepared to answer questions about:
- When to use mobile layouts
- Differences between desktop and mobile report views
- Best practices for mobile usability
- How visuals are added to the mobile layout
- What happens when no mobile layout is defined
Exam Tip
If a question mentions:
- Phones
- Small screens
- Executives on the go
- Power BI mobile app
👉 The correct solution often involves designing or modifying a mobile layout, not changing the desktop report.
Summary
Designing reports for mobile devices ensures that Power BI content is:
- Accessible
- Actionable
- Optimized for modern consumption patterns
For the PL-300 exam, focus on intentional layout design, usability principles, and understanding how Power BI separates desktop and mobile experiences.
Practice Questions
Go to the practice questions for this topic.
