186

What is the MySQL command to retrieve the count of records in a table?

12 Answers 12

260
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM fooTable;

will count the number of rows in the table.

See the reference manual.

9
  • 8
    Is it any faster when I use name of indexed column instead of * ? Like this: SELECT COUNT(id) FROM tablename
    – user1810543
    Nov 8, 2012 at 21:01
  • 1
    Only slightly. I got a 21961904 row table which his COUNT queried in 115 sec, while using the ID took 107 sec.
    – Bondolin
    Jun 6, 2013 at 11:44
  • 2
    COUNT(*) is a strict language definition. You will get a parse error if you try COUNT (*) note the space
    – ppostma1
    Jun 23, 2014 at 18:30
  • 9
    You can do COUNT(1), this will be the fastest way. Sep 14, 2016 at 17:05
  • What is the best way for using COUNT() to write a variable in PHP? Do I do "...COUNT(*) AS rowCount..." in the SQL, does it use $results->num_rows, or is there a way to call this result directly?
    – Nosajimiki
    Apr 24, 2017 at 19:26
96

Because nobody mentioned it:

show table status;

lists all tables along with some additional information, including estimated rows for each table. This is what phpMyAdmin is using for its database page.

This information is available in MySQL 4, probably in MySQL 3.23 too - long time prior information schema database.

The number shown is estimated for InnoDB and TokuDB but it is absolutely correct for MyISAM and Aria (Maria) storage engines.

Per the documentation:

The number of rows. Some storage engines, such as MyISAM, store the exact count. For other storage engines, such as InnoDB, this value is an approximation, and may vary from the actual value by as much as 40% to 50%. In such cases, use SELECT COUNT(*) to obtain an accurate count.

This also is fastest way to see the row count on MySQL, because query like:

select count(*) from table;

Doing full table scan what could be very expensive operation that might take hours on large high load server. It also increase disk I/O.

The same operation might block the table for inserts and updates - this happen only on exotic storage engines.

InnoDB and TokuDB are OK with table lock, but need full table scan.

4
  • 3
    This looks like the most efficient way to count rows. I wonder why it is not the answer? I'm using InnoDB. With table lock, the number of rows should be exact right? Oct 27, 2016 at 14:07
  • for innodb it is estimated. but you can use it in some cases "Our website have xxx members", "We detected xxx results similar to yours" and so on.
    – Nick
    Oct 27, 2016 at 14:13
  • I am not sure. but for Innodb is not real count. But is quite useful for million row tables.
    – Nick
    Oct 28, 2016 at 1:01
  • 4
    Going through tables to count each row to get a row count is rather ridiculous. So I prefer this answer as well. Jun 18, 2017 at 21:05
38

We have another way to find out the number of rows in a table without running a select query on that table.

Every MySQL instance has information_schema database. If you run the following query, it will give complete details about the table including the approximate number of rows in that table.

select * from information_schema.TABLES where table_name = 'table_name'\G
2
  • Is this faster as well on a MyISAM table since MyISAM is storing the number of rows? Mar 8, 2017 at 11:06
  • I never tested this on MyISAM. Jan 18, 2018 at 12:42
6

Simply:

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `tablename`
5
select count(*) from YourTable
4

If you have several fields in your table and your table is huge, it's better DO NOT USE * because of it load all fields to memory and using the following will have better performance

SELECT COUNT(1) FROM fooTable;
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  • 1
    This is incorrect. See stackoverflow.com/questions/5179969/… COUNT(1) may actually be much slower for MyISAM.
    – jcoffland
    Oct 25, 2018 at 15:43
  • @jcoffland you can try t by myself, especially when you have a join or where conditions is will be much much faster than count(*).
    – Yuseferi
    Oct 26, 2018 at 4:36
3

Just do a

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table;

You can specify conditions with a Where after that

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table WHERE eye_color='brown';
2

As mentioned by Santosh, I think this query is suitably fast, while not querying all the table.

To return integer result of number of data records, for a specific tablename in a particular database:

select TABLE_ROWS from information_schema.TABLES where TABLE_SCHEMA = 'database' 
AND table_name='tablename';
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  • 1
    This may return an estimated number of rows. In one example, I got 55,940,343 rows using COUNT(*) but 56,163,339 using this method so it was off by more than 200k.
    – jcoffland
    Oct 25, 2018 at 15:46
  • @jcoffland, I mentioned the answer by _ Santosh_ above which states the result is approximate. My answer is a more detailed practical query. Its quite clear across answers if you want precise count use count(*) with performance awareness Oct 25, 2018 at 21:54
2

If you have a primary key or a unique key/index, the faster method possible (Tested with 4 millions row tables)

SHOW INDEXES FROM "database.tablename" WHERE Key_Name=\"PRIMARY\"

and then get cardinality field (it is close to instant)

Times where from 0.4s to 0.0001ms

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  • 1
    This is brilliant! Counted rows for an unusable table. Jul 8, 2021 at 12:00
1
$sql="SELECT count(*) as toplam FROM wp_postmeta WHERE meta_key='ICERIK' AND post_id=".$id;
$total = 0;
$sqls = mysql_query($sql,$conn);
if ( $sqls ) {
    $total = mysql_result($sqls, 0);
};
echo "Total:".$total;`
1
  • This answer is outdated, mysql_result is deprecated in PHP 5.5.0 and removed in PHP 7.0.0
    – luke77
    Jun 1, 2020 at 13:20
1

You have to use count() returns the number of rows that matches a specified criteria

select count(*) from table_name;
0

It can be convenient to select count with filter by indexed field. Try this

EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM table_name WHERE key < anything; 

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