You want to create a cutout effect in PowerPoint where one shape punches a hole through another shape. The Merge Shapes Subtract command removes the overlapping area of two shapes, leaving a transparent hole. This article explains how the Subtract command works and the exact steps to create cutouts for logos, diagrams, and slide backgrounds.
Key Takeaways: Using Merge Shapes Subtract to Cut Holes in Shapes
- Shape Format > Merge Shapes > Subtract: Removes the top shape from the bottom shape, creating a transparent cutout.
- Select the base shape first, then the cutting shape: The subtract order determines which shape is removed from which.
- Union, Combine, Fragment, Intersect: Other Merge Shapes commands produce different results; only Subtract creates a single shape with a hole.
How Merge Shapes Subtract Works in PowerPoint
Merge Shapes is a set of five commands available in PowerPoint for Microsoft 365 and PowerPoint 2013 or later. The Subtract command takes two or more selected shapes and removes the overlapping area of the top shape from the bottom shape. The result is a single shape that has a cutout where the top shape was located.
The Subtract command requires at least two shapes. The bottom shape is the base object you want to keep. The top shape acts as the cutting tool. After subtraction, the cutting shape disappears. The remaining shape has a transparent hole that matches the exact outline of the cutting shape.
This technique is useful for creating custom icons, masking images, designing infographics, and making text cutouts. You can combine Subtract with other Merge Shapes commands to build complex vector graphics directly inside PowerPoint without external image editors.
Prerequisites for Using Merge Shapes Subtract
Before you can use Subtract, verify the following:
- You have PowerPoint 2013 or later. Older versions do not include Merge Shapes.
- The Merge Shapes button is added to the Quick Access Toolbar or the Shape Format tab is visible. If you do not see Merge Shapes, add it by going to File > Options > Quick Access Toolbar, select All Commands, find Merge Shapes, and click Add.
- You have at least two shapes selected. The shapes must overlap for Subtract to produce a visible cutout.
- The shapes are native PowerPoint shapes, not grouped objects or imported pictures. Ungroup any grouped objects before using Subtract.
Steps to Create a Cutout Using Merge Shapes Subtract
- Insert the base shape
Go to Insert > Shapes and choose a shape. Draw the shape on your slide. This shape will become the final object with a hole. - Insert the cutting shape
Go to Insert > Shapes and choose a shape that will define the cutout area. Draw this shape on top of the base shape where you want the hole to appear. The cutting shape can be any closed shape such as a circle, rectangle, or custom freeform. - Select the base shape first
Click the base shape to select it. Hold the Ctrl key and click the cutting shape. The selection order matters: the base shape must be selected first, and the cutting shape second. - Open the Merge Shapes menu
With both shapes selected, go to Shape Format on the ribbon. In the Insert Shapes group, click Merge Shapes. If Merge Shapes is not visible, add it to the Quick Access Toolbar as described in the prerequisites. - Click Subtract
From the dropdown, select Subtract. The cutting shape disappears, and the base shape now has a transparent hole where the cutting shape overlapped. The remaining shape is a single vector object.
Creating a Cutout With Text
You can also use Subtract to punch text out of a shape. Insert a shape such as a rectangle. Then insert a text box and type the word you want to cut out. Resize and position the text box over the shape. Select the shape first, then the text box. Go to Shape Format > Merge Shapes > Subtract. The text becomes a hole in the shape. Note that the text must be converted to a shape first if it is in a text box. To do this, draw a rectangle over the text, select both, and use Merge Shapes > Fragment. Then delete the rectangle and the unwanted fragments, leaving only the text shapes. Then select the base shape and the text shapes and subtract.
Creating Multiple Cutouts in One Shape
To create several holes in one base shape, insert all the cutting shapes and position them on top of the base shape. Select the base shape first, then hold Ctrl and click each cutting shape. All cutting shapes must be selected after the base shape. Then go to Shape Format > Merge Shapes > Subtract. All overlapping areas are removed in one operation.
Common Issues When Using Subtract
Merge Shapes Button Is Grayed Out
The Merge Shapes button is disabled when no shapes are selected or when the selected objects are not native PowerPoint shapes. Select two or more shapes. If the button remains gray, ungroup any grouped objects by right-clicking and choosing Group > Ungroup. Also, check that you have not selected a picture or a chart. Pictures must be converted to shapes using Merge Shapes > Fragment first, but this only works with vector graphics like SVG or icons inserted from Insert > Icons.
Subtract Removes the Wrong Shape
If the result is the opposite of what you expected, you selected the shapes in the wrong order. The base shape must be selected first, and the cutting shape second. When you select shapes, the last selected shape becomes the top object. PowerPoint subtracts the top shape from the bottom shape. To fix this, undo with Ctrl+Z, select the base shape first, then the cutting shape, and apply Subtract again.
Cutout Is Not Transparent
The cutout area shows the slide background color instead of being truly transparent. This is expected behavior because PowerPoint shapes cannot have true transparency holes. The cutout reveals whatever is behind the shape on the slide, such as the slide background, an image, or another shape. To show content behind the cutout, place the base shape on top of the content you want to see through the hole. For example, place a rectangle with a cutout on top of a picture to create a photo frame effect.
Subtract Produces Unexpected Fragments
If the cutting shape extends beyond the base shape, Subtract still works but the result may include fragments of the cutting shape outside the base. Keep the cutting shape entirely within the base shape boundaries to avoid extra pieces. If fragments appear, delete them manually or undo and adjust the cutting shape position.
| Merge Shapes Command | Result | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Union | Combines all shapes into one merged shape | Creating a single shape from overlapping objects |
| Combine | Removes overlapping areas and keeps all shapes as one | Making complex cutouts where you want to keep all pieces |
| Fragment | Breaks shapes into separate pieces at every intersection | Creating custom shapes from overlapping geometry |
| Intersect | Keeps only the overlapping area of all shapes | Masking content to a specific overlapping region |
| Subtract | Removes the top shape from the bottom shape | Cutting holes in shapes for cutout effects |
You can now create cutouts in any shape using the Merge Shapes Subtract command. Try combining Subtract with Union to build custom icons that have both positive and negative space. For advanced cutouts, use the Freeform shape tool to draw irregular cutting shapes before applying Subtract.