Neon Deploy: Learn how Neon helps developers ship faster with Postgres. Grab your ticket

PostgreSQL Interval Data Type

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn about the PostgreSQL interval data type and how to manipulate interval values.

Introduction to PostgreSQL interval data type

The interval data type allows you to store and manipulate a period in years, months, days, hours, minutes, and seconds.

The following illustrates the interval type:

@ interval [ fields ] [ (p) ]

An interval value requires 16 bytes of storage that can store a period with the allowed range from -178,000,000 years to 178,000,000 years.

Additionally, an interval value can have an optional precision value p with the permitted range from 0 to 6. The precision p is the number of fraction digits retained in the second field.

The at sign ( @) is optional so you can omit it.

The following  examples show some interval values:

interval '2 months ago';
interval '3 hours 20 minutes';

Internally, PostgreSQL stores interval values as months, days, and seconds. The months and days values are integers while the seconds field can have fractions.

The interval values are very useful when doing date or time arithmetic. For example, if you want to know the time of 3 hours 2 minutes ago at the current time of last year, you can use the following statement:

SELECT
	now(),
	now() - INTERVAL '1 year 3 hours 20 minutes'
             AS "3 hours 20 minutes ago of last year";

Output:

now              | 3 hours 20 minutes ago of last year
-------------------------------+-------------------------------------
 2024-01-31 21:34:52.242914-05 | 2023-01-31 18:14:52.242914-05
(1 row)

Let’s see how to format interval values for input and output.

PostgreSQL interval input format

PostgreSQL provides you with the following verbose syntax to write the interval values:

quantity unit [quantity unit...] [direction]
  • quantity is a number, sign + or - is also accepted
  • unit can be any of millennium, century, decade, year, month, week, day, hour, minute, second, millisecond, microsecond, or abbreviation (y, m, d, etc.,) or plural forms (months, days, etc.).
  • direction can be ago or empty string ''

This format is called postgres_verbose which is also used for the interval output format. The following examples illustrate some interval values that use the verbose syntax:

INTERVAL '1 year 2 months 3 days';
INTERVAL '2 weeks ago';

ISO 8601 interval format

In addition to the verbose syntax, PostgreSQL allows you to write the interval values using ISO 8601 time intervals in two ways: format with designators and alternative format.

The ISO 8601 format with designators is like this:

P quantity unit [ quantity unit ...] [ T [ quantity unit ...]]

In this format, the interval value must start with the letter P. The letter T is for determining the time-of-day unit.

The following table illustrates the ISO 8601 interval unit abbreviations:

AbbreviationDescription
YYears
MMonths (in the date part)
WWeeks
DDays
HHours
MMinutes (in the time part)
SSeconds

Note that M can be months or minutes depending on whether it appears before or after the letter T.

For example, the interval of 6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second can be written in the ISO 8601 designators format as follows:

P6Y5M4DT3H2M1S

The alternative form of ISO 8601 is:

P [ years-months-days ] [ T hours:minutes:seconds ]

It must start with the letter P, and the letter T separates the date and time parts of the interval value.

For example, the interval of 6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second can be written in the ISO 8601 alternative form as:

P0006-05-04T03:02:01

PostgreSQL interval output format

The output style of interval values is set by using the SET intervalstyle command, for example:

SET intervalstyle = 'sql_standard';

PostgreSQL provides four output formats:

  • sql standard
  • postgres
  • postgresverbose
  • iso_8601

PostgreSQL uses the postgres style by default for formatting the interval values.

The following represents the interval of 6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second in the four styles:

SET intervalstyle = 'sql_standard';
SELECT
  INTERVAL '6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second';

SET intervalstyle = 'postgres';
SELECT
  INTERVAL '6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second';

SET intervalstyle = 'postgres_verbose';
SELECT
  INTERVAL '6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second';

SET intervalstyle = 'iso_8601';
SELECT
  INTERVAL '6 years 5 months 4 days 3 hours 2 minutes 1 second';
sql standardpostgrespostgres verboseiso_8601
+6-5 +4 +3:02:016 years 5 mons 4 days 03:02:01@ 6 years 5 mons 4 days 3 hours 2 mins 1 secP6Y5M4DT3H2M1S

Interval operators

You can apply the arithmetic operator ( +, -, *, etc.,) to the interval values, for example:

SELECT INTERVAL '2h 50m' + INTERVAL '10m'; -- 03:00:00
SELECT INTERVAL '2h 50m' - INTERVAL '50m'; -- 02:00:00
SELECT 600 * INTERVAL '1 minute'; -- 10:00:00

Converting PostgreSQL interval to string

To convert an interval value to a string, you use the TO_CHAR() function.

TO_CHAR(interval,format)

The TO_CHAR() function takes the first argument as an interval value, the second one as the format, and returns a string that represents the interval in the specified format.

See the following example:

SELECT
    TO_CHAR(
        INTERVAL '17h 20m 05s',
        'HH24:MI:SS'
    );

Output:

to_char
----------
 17:20:05
(1 row)

Extracting data from a PostgreSQL interval

To extract fields such as year, month, date, etc., from an interval, you use the EXTRACT() function.

EXTRACT(field FROM interval)

The field can be the year, month, date, hour, minutes, etc., that you want to extract from the interval. The extract function returns a value of type double precision.

See the following example:

SELECT
    EXTRACT (
        MINUTE
        FROM
            INTERVAL '5 hours 21 minutes'
    );

In this example, we extracted the minute from the interval of 5 hours 21 minutes and it returned 21 as expected:

date_part
-----------
        21
(1 row)

Adjusting interval values

PostgreSQL provides two functions justifydays and justifyhours that allows you to adjust the interval of 30-day as one month and the interval of 24 hours as one day:

SELECT
    justify_days(INTERVAL '30 days'),
    justify_hours(INTERVAL '24 hours');
justify_days | justify_hours
--------------+---------------
 1 mon        | 1 day
(1 row)

In addition, the justify_interval function adjusts interval using justifydays and  justifyhours with additional sign adjustments:

SELECT
    justify_interval(interval '1 year -1 hour');
justify_interval
--------------------------
 11 mons 29 days 23:00:00
(1 row)

Using interval type in a table

First, create a table called event that has three columns id, event_name, and duration. The duration column is interval type:

CREATE TABLE event (
    id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
    event_name VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
    duration INTERVAL NOT NULL
);

Second, insert some rows into the event table:

INSERT INTO event (event_name, duration)
VALUES
    ('pgConf', '1 hour 30 minutes'),
    ('pgDAY', '2 days 5 hours')
RETURNING *;

Output:

id | event_name | duration
----+------------+----------
  1 | pgConf     | PT1H30M
  2 | pgDAY      | P2DT5H
(2 rows)


INSERT 0 2

Third, extract components (days, hours, minutes) from values in the interval column:

SELECT
    event_name,
    duration,
    EXTRACT(DAY FROM duration) AS days,
    EXTRACT(HOUR FROM duration) AS hours,
    EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM duration) AS minutes
FROM event;

Output:

event_name | duration | days | hours | minutes
------------+----------+------+-------+---------
 pgConf     | PT1H30M  |    0 |     1 |      30
 pgDAY      | P2DT5H   |    2 |     5 |       0
(2 rows)

Fourth, retrieve the events with a duration longer than one day:

SELECT *
FROM event
WHERE duration > INTERVAL '1 day';

Output:

id | event_name | duration
----+------------+----------
  2 | pgDAY      | P2DT5H
(1 row)

Finally, calculate the total duration for all events:

SELECT
    SUM(duration) AS total_duration
FROM event
;

Output:

total_duration
----------------
 P2DT6H30M
(1 row)

To make the output more clear, you can extract components of the total duration using a common table expression (CTE):

WITH cte AS(
   SELECT SUM(duration) AS total_duration
   FROM event
)
SELECT
    total_duration,
    EXTRACT(DAY FROM total_duration ) AS days,
    EXTRACT(HOUR FROM total_duration ) AS hours,
    EXTRACT(MINUTE FROM total_duration ) AS minutes
FROM cte;

Output:

total_duration | days | hours | minutes
----------------+------+-------+---------
 P2DT6H30M      |    2 |     6 |      30
(1 row)

In this tutorial, you have learned about the PostgreSQL interval data type and how to manipulate interval values.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?