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Data Type Storage Requirements

The following tables indicate the approximate data storage requirements for each data type.

Numeric Data Types

Data TypeStorage Requirement
TINYINT1 byte
SMALLINT2 bytes
MEDIUMINT3 bytes
INT4 bytes
BIGINT8 bytes
FLOAT(p)4 bytes if p <= 24, otherwise 8 bytes
DOUBLE8 bytes
DECIMALSee table below
BIT(M)(M+7)/8 bytes

Note that MEDIUMINT columns will require 4 bytes in memory (for example, in InnoDB buffer pool).

Decimal

Decimals are stored using a binary format, with the integer and the fraction stored separately. Each nine-digit multiple requires 4 bytes, followed by a number of bytes for whatever remains, as follows:

Remaining digitsStorage Requirement
00 bytes
11 byte
21 byte
32 bytes
42 bytes
53 bytes
63 bytes
74 bytes
84 bytes

String Data Types

In the descriptions below, M is the declared column length (in characters or in bytes), while len is the actual length in bytes of the value.

Data TypeStorage Requirement
ENUM1 byte for up to 255 enum values, 2 bytes for 256 to 65,535 enum values
CHAR(M)M × w bytes, where w is the number of bytes required for the maximum-length character in the character set
BINARY(M)M bytes
VARCHAR(M), VARBINARY(M)len + 1 bytes if column is 0 – 255 bytes, len + 2 bytes if column may require more than 255 bytes
TINYBLOB, TINYTEXTlen + 1 bytes
BLOB, TEXTlen + 2 bytes
MEDIUMBLOB, MEDIUMTEXTlen + 3 bytes
LONGBLOB, LONGTEXTlen + 4 bytes
SETGiven M members of the set, (M+7)/8 bytes, rounded up to 1, 2, 3, 4, or 8 bytes
INET616 bytes
UUID16 bytes

In some character sets, not all characters use the same number of bytes. utf8 encodes characters with one to three bytes per character, while utf8mb4 requires one to four bytes per character.

When using field the COMPRESSED attribute, 1 byte is reserved for metadata. For example, VARCHAR(255) will use +2 bytes instead of +1.

Examples

Assuming a single-byte character-set:

ValueCHAR(2)Storage RequiredVARCHAR(2)Storage Required
''' '2 bytes''1 byte
'1''1 '2 bytes'1'2 bytes
'12''12'2 bytes'12'3 bytes

Date and Time Data Types

Data TypeStorage Requirement
DATE3 bytes
TIME3 bytes
DATETIME8 bytes
TIMESTAMP4 bytes
YEAR1 byte

Microseconds

MariaDB 5.3 and MySQL 5.6 introduced microseconds. The underlying storage implementations were different, but from MariaDB 10.1, MariaDB defaults to the MySQL format (by means of the mysql56_temporal_format variable). Microseconds have the following additional storage requirements:

MySQL 5.6+ and MariaDB 10.1+

PrecisionStorage Requirement
00 bytes
1,21 byte
3,42 bytes
5,63 bytes

MariaDB 5.3 - MariaDB 10.0

PrecisionStorage Requirement
00 bytes
1,21 byte
3,4,52 bytes
63 bytes

NULLs

For the InnoDB COMPACT, DYNAMIC and COMPRESSED row formats, a number of bytes will be allocated in the record header for the nullable fields. If there are between 1 and 8 nullable fields, 1 such byte will be allocated. In the record payload area, no space will be reserved for values that are NULL.

For the InnoDB REDUNDANT row format, the overhead is 1 bit in the record header (as a part of the 1-byte or 2-byte "end of field" pointer). In that format, a NULL fixed-length field will consume the same amount of space as any NOT NULL value in the record payload area. The motivation is that it is possible to update in place between NOT NULL and NULL values.

In other formats, NULL values usually require 1 bit in the data file, 1 byte in the index file.

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