Download professional RACI matrix templates to define roles and responsibilities across your projects. Ready-to-use templates for IT, HR, marketing, construction, healthcare, and more — built by a PM professional with 15+ years of experience.

52 Free RACI Chart Templates for Excel

Download 52 professionally designed RACI chart templates across 8 categories. Each template includes color-coded R/A/C/I cells, dropdown validations, auto-calculated role summaries, and realistic example data — all free for Excel.

Standard RACI Templates

Classic RACI matrix formats with colour-coded roles, dropdown validations, and conditional formatting. The essentials every project manager needs.

Free Simple RACI Matrix Template for Excel with color-coded responsibility assignments

Simple RACI Matrix

Clean, minimal RACI layout for any project. Pre-formatted with color-coded R/A/C/I cells, dropdown validations, and auto-sizing columns.

Download Simple RACI Matrix (.xlsx)

RACI Matrix Template Organized by Project Phases for Excel Download

RACI by Phase

Tasks grouped by project lifecycle phases — Discovery, Design, Build, Launch — with separate RACI assignments per phase.

Download RACI by Phase (.xlsx)

RACI Matrix Combined with Work Breakdown Structure WBS Template

RACI + WBS

Combines Work Breakdown Structure numbering with RACI assignments. WBS hierarchy auto-generates.

Download RACI + WBS (.xlsx)

One-Page Printable RACI Chart Template for Excel

One-Page RACI

Fits on a single printed page. Perfect for kickoff meetings, wall posters, and quick-reference handouts.

Download One-Page RACI (.xlsx)


 

RACI Variants — RASCI, DACI, RAPID & More

Beyond standard RACI — RASCI adds Support, DACI focuses on decision drivers, RAPID handles cross-functional decisions, RACI-VS adds verification steps.

Free RASCI Matrix Template with Support Role for Excel Download

RASCI Matrix

Adds the ‘Support’ role for team members who assist but aren’t directly responsible. Most popular RACI variant.

Download RASCI Matrix (.xlsx)

RAPID Decision Matrix Template Recommend Agree Perform Input Decide

RAPID Matrix

Recommend, Agree, Perform, Input, Decide. Best for cross-functional teams needing precise decision accountability.

Download RAPID Matrix (.xlsx)

RACI-VS Matrix Template with Verifier and Signatory Roles

RACI-VS Template

Adds Verifier and Signatory roles. Built for quality-critical industries — pharma, aerospace, medical devices.

Download RACI-VS Template (.xlsx)

DRASCI Matrix Template Driver plus RASCI Combined Framework

DRASCI Matrix

Driver + RASCI combined. For projects needing a central delegator driving responsibilities across teams.

Download DRASCI Matrix (.xlsx)

CARS Model Template Communicate Approve Responsible Support

CARS Model

Communicate, Approve, Responsible, Support. Clearer language for teams confused by the R vs A distinction.

Download CARS Model (.xlsx)


 

RACI Templates by Department

Pre-filled RACI templates with the right tasks, roles, and deliverables for specific departments — IT, HR, Marketing, Finance, Sales, Legal, Supply Chain, and Product.


 

RACI Templates by Industry

Industry-specific RACI templates with relevant terminology, project phases, and stakeholder roles already mapped out.


 

Agile & Scrum RACI Templates

RACI templates adapted for agile workflows — sprint ceremonies, Scrum roles, Kanban boards, SAFe frameworks, and DevOps pipelines.

Scrum RACI Template for Sprint Ceremonies Product Owner and Dev Team

Scrum RACI

Sprint ceremonies mapped to Scrum roles — Product Owner, Scrum Master, Dev Team, QA, and UX.

Download Scrum RACI (.xlsx)

Kanban RACI Template for Flow-Based Workflow and WIP Management

Kanban RACI

Maps RACI roles to Kanban workflow stages — backlog grooming, WIP management, pull requests, and deployment.

Download Kanban RACI (.xlsx)

SAFe Scaled Agile RACI Template for PI Planning and ART Sync

SAFe RACI

Covers Program Increment planning, feature breakdown, team breakouts, system demos, and inspect & adapt.

Download SAFe RACI (.xlsx)

User Story Lifecycle RACI Template for Writing Estimation and Testing

User Story RACI

Maps RACI roles across the user story lifecycle — writing, acceptance criteria, estimation, dev, and testing.

Download User Story RACI (.xlsx)

DevOps RACI Template for CI CD Pipeline Infrastructure and Monitoring

DevOps RACI

Covers CI/CD pipeline setup, infrastructure as code, automated testing, security scanning, and incident response.

Download DevOps RACI (.xlsx)


 

RACI Templates by Format & Use Case

Different RACI layouts for different needs — presentations, documents, person-focused views, process-based SOPs, posters, and timeline-integrated charts.

Process-Based RACI Template for Business Process Management and SOPs

Process RACI

Maps RACI to business processes instead of project tasks. Ideal for SOPs, BPM, and operational workflows.

Download Process RACI (.xlsx)


 

RACI Dashboards & Analysis

Smart dashboards that analyse your RACI data, flag common problems, and visualise role distribution across your team.

RACI Audit Health Check Template to Flag Missing Roles and Duplicates

RACI Audit

Automatically flags common issues: tasks with no R, multiple A’s per task, and over-consulted roles.

Download RACI Audit (.xlsx)


 

RACI Starter Kits

Complete project starter packs — each kit includes a RACI matrix plus supporting documents like project charters, communication plans, and governance frameworks.

What is a RACI Chart?

A RACI chart (also known as a RACI matrix or Responsibility Assignment Matrix) is a project management tool that maps every task, milestone, or decision in a project to the people or roles involved. The acronym stands for Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed — the four levels of involvement a person can have in any given task.

Think of a RACI chart as your project’s “rules of engagement.” It answers the questions that cause most project delays: Who’s doing this? Who approves it? Who do we ask for input? Who needs to know?

RACI charts are particularly valuable for cross-functional projects where multiple departments, external vendors, or stakeholders are involved. Without clear role definition, tasks get duplicated, decisions stall, and accountability disappears.

Why RACI matters — by the numbers

According to McKinsey, managers spend 37% of their time making decisions, and more than half of that time is wasted due to unclear ownership. For Fortune 500 companies, this adds up to 530,000 lost workdays and ~$250 million in wasted labor costs annually. A well-built RACI chart eliminates this ambiguity.

R-A-C-I Meaning Explained

Responsible (R) — “The Doer”: The person or people who perform the actual work to complete the task. There can be multiple people responsible for a single task, especially when it requires collaboration across skills. For example, in a website redesign, both the designer and developer might be Responsible for building the homepage.

Accountable (A) — “The Owner”: The single person who has ultimate ownership and decision-making authority for the task. This is the person who signs off on the work and is answerable for its success or failure. There should always be exactly one “A” per task — this is the most important rule of RACI.

Consulted (C) — “The Advisor”: People whose expertise or opinions are sought before or during the task. This is a two-way communication — you actively ask for their input. For example, consulting a legal team before finalizing contract terms.

Informed (I) — “The Loop”: People who need to be kept up-to-date on progress or outcomes but don’t actively participate in the task. This is one-way communication — status updates, completion notifications, or milestone reports.

RACI Matrix Example

Here’s a practical RACI chart example for a website redesign project showing how roles and responsibilities are assigned across tasks:

Task / Deliverable Project Manager Designer Developer Content Writer Client / Sponsor
Define project scope & requirements R C C I A
Create wireframes & mockups I R C I A
Write page content & copy I C I R A
Front-end development A C R I I
QA testing & bug fixes A I R I I
Final approval & go-live R I R I A
Key takeaway from this example

Notice how the Client/Sponsor is “Accountable” for most deliverables (they approve the work) while team members are “Responsible” for execution. Also note that each row has exactly one “A” — this is critical for avoiding decision bottlenecks.

When to Use a RACI Chart

Not every project needs a RACI chart. Here’s when one is especially valuable:

Use a RACI chart when: your project involves multiple departments or cross-functional teams, you have more than 5 stakeholders, the decision-making or approval process is complex, there’s a history of role confusion or duplicated work, you’re in a regulated industry requiring documented accountability, or when team turnover is high and new members need quick clarity on who does what.

Skip the RACI chart when: the project is small with only 2–3 people, tasks and ownership are already crystal clear, or your team uses an Agile framework (like Scrum) where roles are already well-defined through ceremonies and artifacts.

How to Create a RACI Matrix

Step 1 — List all tasks and deliverables. Start by breaking your project down into its major tasks, milestones, and decisions. Be specific enough to avoid ambiguity, but not so granular that the chart becomes unwieldy. A good RACI chart typically has 15–30 tasks.

Step 2 — Identify all roles and stakeholders. List every person or role involved in the project across the top of your matrix. Use role titles (e.g., “Project Manager”, “QA Lead”) rather than individual names — this makes the chart reusable.

Step 3 — Assign R, A, C, or I to every cell. Work through each task and assign the appropriate RACI designation to every stakeholder. The golden rule: every task must have exactly one “A” and at least one “R.”

Step 4 — Validate with the team. Walk through the completed RACI chart with your team in a kickoff meeting. Confirm that assignments are accurate and that no one is overloaded. Adjust based on feedback.

Step 5 — Review and update regularly. A RACI chart is a living document. Review it at phase transitions, when team members change, or when scope shifts significantly.

Best Practices

The 7 rules of effective RACI charts

1. Only one “A” per task — always. 2. Every task needs at least one “R.” 3. Minimize “C” assignments — too many consulted parties slow decisions. 4. If a column is mostly “I,” consider removing that stakeholder. 5. If a column is mostly “R,” check for overload. 6. Keep it to 15–30 tasks — more than that and it becomes unmanageable. 7. Use role titles, not names — this makes the chart transferable.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Multiple “A” entries per task. This is the most common and most damaging mistake. When two people are accountable, neither truly is. Every task needs a single decision-maker.

Confusing “R” and “A.” Responsible means you do the work. Accountable means you own the outcome. These are different roles — the CEO might be Accountable for a product launch while the marketing team is Responsible for execution.

Making the chart too detailed. A RACI chart with 100 tasks defeats the purpose of clarity. Stick to high-level deliverables and major decisions. Save the granular task breakdown for your project plan or work breakdown structure.

Never updating it. A RACI chart created at project kickoff and never revisited becomes stale. Team changes, scope creep, and evolving priorities all require RACI updates.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between RACI and RASCI?

RASCI adds an “S” for Supportive — people who assist the Responsible person but aren’t primarily responsible themselves. Use RASCI when you need to distinguish between primary doers and helpers on complex tasks.

Can one person be both R and A for the same task?

Yes, this is common on smaller teams. A project manager might be both Responsible for creating the project plan and Accountable for its accuracy. However, on larger projects, separating R and A provides better checks and balances.

How many tasks should a RACI chart include?

Aim for 15–30 tasks. Fewer than 10 and the chart may be too high-level to be useful; more than 40 and it becomes overwhelming. Focus on deliverables, decisions, and milestones rather than every granular sub-task.

Is a RACI chart suitable for Agile teams?

RACI charts aren’t typically used within Scrum teams (where roles are defined by the framework itself), but they’re very useful for Agile organizations when defining responsibilities between the Agile team and external stakeholders like business sponsors, vendors, or compliance teams.

What format should I use — Excel, Word, or PowerPoint?

Use Excel when you need a working, editable matrix that the team updates regularly. Use PowerPoint for stakeholder presentations and project kickoff meetings. Use Word when the RACI is part of a larger project charter or documentation package. Use PDF for sharing read-only versions.

Can I use these RACI templates for commercial projects?

Yes. All templates on Excelx are free for personal and commercial use. You may customize, modify, and distribute them within your organization. Attribution is appreciated but not required.

About the Author: PNRao

Hi – I'm PNRao, founder of Excelx. With over 20 years of experience in Project Management and Automation, I specialize in building high-performance systems that streamline complex workflows. My mission is to provide you with professional-grade Project Management templates—from automated Gantt charts to resource workload dashboards—powered by Excel, VBA, and Power BI. Whether you are managing a small team or a global portfolio, you'll find the tools here to transform your data into strategic action.

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