427

How can one select the first day of the month of a given DateTime variable?


I know it's quite easy to do using this kind of code:

select CAST(CAST(YEAR(@mydate) AS VARCHAR(4)) 
+ '/' + CAST(MONTH(@mydate) AS VARCHAR(2)) + '/01' AS DATETIME)

This is not very elegant, and not very fast either.

Is there a better way to do this?

34 Answers 34

760
SELECT DATEADD(month, DATEDIFF(month, 0, @mydate), 0) AS StartOfMonth
7
216

In addition to all the above answer, a way based on a function introduced in sql 2012

SELECT DATEFROMPARTS(YEAR(@mydate),MONTH(@mydate),1)
0
150

Starting with SQL Server 2012:

SELECT DATEADD(DAY,1,EOMONTH(@mydate,-1))
1
  • This looks more efficient and straightforward. Also, with the help of EOMONTH(@mydate,-1), we can get the first date of the next or previous month as well.
    – Himanshu
    Nov 8, 2023 at 5:50
18

From SQL Server 2022 you can use DATETRUNC

SELECT DATETRUNC(month, @mydate)

for this need

1
  • 5
    2022, gosh you are updated :) Jun 29, 2023 at 14:36
16

Simple Query:

SELECT DATEADD(m, DATEDIFF(m, 0, GETDATE()), 0) 
-- Instead of GetDate you can put any date.
1
  • I like this.....select DATEFROMPARTS(year(getdate()),month(getdate()),'01') ,convert(date,dateadd(day,1-day(getdate()),getdate())) ,DATEADD(m, DATEDIFF(m, 0, GETDATE()), 0) ,DATEADD(d, DATEDIFF(d, 0, GETDATE()), 0)
    – JWBG
    Mar 22, 2023 at 17:18
15

The casting of a string (i.e. "5/1/2009") to datetime is certainly more legible but we found code a while back that would return the first of the month...

DECLARE @Date DATETIME
//...
SELECT DATEADD(mm, DATEDIFF(mm,0,@Date), 0)
8

This might be a new function, but you can also use old functions :

select DATEFROMPARTS(year(@mydate),month(@mydate),'01')

If the date in the variable was for example '2017-10-29' it would return a date of '2017-10-01'

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/datefromparts-transact-sql?view=sql-server-ver15

7
SELECT @myDate - DAY(@myDate) + 1
5
  • 1
    Really simple and elegant solution but keep in mind that this also returns the time portion of the date if specified in the variable.
    – kuklei
    Oct 17, 2014 at 15:52
  • 1
    I couldn't get this to work. Besides the extra closing bracket, I get this error: Operand type clash: date is incompatible with int. I guess it's because you're trying to use the - operator on a date?
    – Sam
    Dec 10, 2014 at 3:26
  • I don't know how good it is in terms of performance, but it certainly does the job.
    – salcoin
    Oct 20, 2015 at 15:39
  • @Sam, you've got a clash because simple arithmetic (+, -) works on datetimes, not on dates.
    – darlove
    Dec 11, 2019 at 17:43
  • You need to declare @myDate as a DateTime rather than just a Date. Which means your date will have time in it - and that may not be desirable (you can always cast it out)
    – Stuart
    Jan 3 at 21:50
6

If you would like to go for SQL Server 2012+ you can try solution I used:

SELECT DATEADD(DAY, 1, EOMONTH(DATEADD(MONTH, -1, GETDATE())))
5

It is probably quite fast. Why not create it as a sql function.

CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[GetFirstDayOfMonth] ( @InputDate    DATETIME )
RETURNS DATETIME
BEGIN

    RETURN CAST(CAST(YEAR(@InputDate) AS VARCHAR(4)) + '/' + 
                CAST(MONTH(@InputDate) AS VARCHAR(2)) + '/01' AS DATETIME)

END
GO
0
4

First and last day of the current month:

select dateadd(mm, -1,dateadd(dd, +1, eomonth(getdate()))) as FirstDay, 
eomonth(getdate()) as LastDay
3

This works too:

    SELECT DATEADD(DAY,(DATEPART(DAY,@mydate)-1)*(-1),@mydate) AS FirstOfMonth
3

Please use this

  1. For Server 2012

    DATEFROMPARTS(year('2015-06-30'),month('2015-06-30'),1)
    
  2. Before Server 2012

    select  cast(cast(year('2015-06-30') as varchar(4))+'-'+ cast(month('2015-06-30') as varchar(2))+'-01' as smalldatetime)
    
2

I used GETDATE() as a date to work with, you can replace it with the date which you need.
Here's how this works: First we format the date in YYYYMMDD... format truncating to keep just the 6 leftmost characters in order to keep just the YYYYMM portion, and then append '01' as the month - and voila! you have the first day of the current month.

SELECT CAST(CONVERT(VARCHAR(6),GETDATE(),112) +'01' AS DATETIME) AS StartOfMonth

BTW, performance is great on this!

2
DECLARE @startofmonth date
SET @startofmonth = DATEADD(dd,1,EOMONTH(Getdate(),-2))

The -2 will get you the first day of last month. ie, getdate() is 10/15/18. Your results would be 9/1/18. Change to -1 and your results would be 10/1/18. 0 would be the start of next month, 11/1/2018.. etc etc.

or

DECLARE @startofmonth date
SET @startofmonth = DATEADD(dd,1,EOMONTH(@mydate,-1))
1
SELECT DATEADD (DAY, -1 * (DAY(GETDATE()) - 1), GETDATE())

.....................................................................

If you dont want the time, then convert it to DATE or if want to make to time to 0:00:00, Convert to DATE and then back to DATETIME.

SELECT CONVERT (DATETIME,  
CONVERT (DATE, DATEADD (DAY, -1 * (DAY(GETDATE()) - 1),
GETDATE())))

Change GETDATE() to the date you want

1

If you are looking at this today, and using SQL server 2012 or newer you have the EOMONTH function which makes things easier:

SELECT DATEADD(day, 1, EOMONTH(DATEADD(month, -1, GETDATE()))) as firstdateofmonth

You can change GETDATE() with whatever date variable you want.

1

Here we can use below query to the first date of the month and last date of the month.

SELECT DATEADD(DAY,1,EOMONTH(Getdate(),-1)) as 'FD',Cast(Getdate()-1 as Date)
as 'LD'
1

If using SQL Server 2012 or above;

SELECT DATEADD(MONTH, -1, DATEADD(DAY, 1, EOMONTH(GETDATE())))
1
----Last Day of Previous Month
SELECT DATEADD(s,-1,DATEADD(mm, DATEDIFF(m,0,GETDATE()),0))
LastDay_PreviousMonth
----Last Day of Current Month
SELECT DATEADD(s,-1,DATEADD(mm, DATEDIFF(m,0,GETDATE())+1,0))
LastDay_CurrentMonth
----Last Day of Next Month
SELECT DATEADD(s,-1,DATEADD(mm, DATEDIFF(m,0,GETDATE())+2,0))
LastDay_NextMonth
1
  • But the OP is looking for the first day of the month. For last day, you could just use EOMONTH() - has been this way since 2012. Feb 14, 2019 at 21:51
1

Try executing the following query:

SELECT DATE_ADD(DATE_ADD(LAST_DAY(CURRENT_DATE-INTERVAL 1 DAY),INTERVAL 1 DAY),INTERVAL -1 MONTH)

0
1

You can use below function for getting 1st day of current month:

DECLARE @mydate date
set @mydate=GETDATE()
SELECT DATEFROMPARTS(YEAR(@mydate),MONTH(@mydate),1)
0

select CONVERT(date,DATEADD(dd,-(DATEPART(dd,getdate())-1),getdate()),120)

This function will provide you date part of start date of the month

0

This query should work very well on MySQL:

SELECT concat(left(curdate(),7),'-01') 
0

What about something different! Use Format.

DECLARE @Date Date =GetDate();
SELECT CONVERT(Date,Format(@Date,'yyyyMM01'));

We can remove the convert if we are casting to Date Column or variable

DECLARE @Date Date =GetDate();
SELECT @Date =Format(@Date,'yyyyMM01');
SELECT [Date]=@Date

Have Fun :)

0
-1

Future googlers, on MySQL, try this:

select date_sub(ref_date, interval day(ref_date)-1 day) as day1;
2
  • 4
    This is a sql-server question, date_sub and interval are mysql.
    – OGHaza
    Dec 12, 2013 at 17:31
  • Good, point, I edited the response. I think it's still relevant for the thread.
    – Ariel T
    Dec 13, 2013 at 15:55
-1

I personal recommended that the sql below because when i try use date function in the condition clause, its slow down my query speed very much.

anyway feel free to try this.

select CONCAT(DATEPART(YYYY,@mydate),'-',DATEPART(MM,@mydate),'-01')
-1

Not to compete with any of the great minds here, but a simple suggestion slightly different that the accepted answer above.

select dateadd(day, -(datepart(day,@date)+1,@date)
-1

I like to use FORMAT, you can even specify a time

SELECT FORMAT(@myDate,'yyyy-MM-01 06:00') first_of_a_month
-1

In Sql Server 2012,

 select getdate()-DATEPART(day, getdate())+1

 select DATEADD(Month,1,getdate())-DATEPART(day, getdate())

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.