SELECT - ORDER BY Clause (Transact-SQL)

Applies to: SQL Server Azure SQL Database Azure SQL Managed Instance Azure Synapse Analytics Analytics Platform System (PDW) SQL analytics endpoint in Microsoft Fabric Warehouse in Microsoft Fabric

Sorts data returned by a query in SQL Server. Use this clause to:

  • Order the result set of a query by the specified column list and, optionally, limit the rows returned to a specified range. The order in which rows are returned in a result set are not guaranteed unless an ORDER BY clause is specified.

  • Determine the order in which ranking function values are applied to the result set.

Transact-SQL syntax conventions

Note

ORDER BY is not supported in SELECT/INTO or CREATE TABLE AS SELECT (CTAS) statements in Azure Synapse Analytics or Analytics Platform System (PDW).

Syntax

-- Syntax for SQL Server and Azure SQL Database  
  
ORDER BY order_by_expression  
    [ COLLATE collation_name ]   
    [ ASC | DESC ]   
    [ ,...n ]   
[ <offset_fetch> ]  
  
<offset_fetch> ::=  
{   
    OFFSET { integer_constant | offset_row_count_expression } { ROW | ROWS }  
    [  
      FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } {integer_constant | fetch_row_count_expression } { ROW | ROWS } ONLY  
    ]  
}  
-- Syntax for Azure Synapse Analytics and Parallel Data Warehouse  
  
[ ORDER BY   
    {  
    order_by_expression   
    [ ASC | DESC ]   
    } [ ,...n ]   
]   

Note

To view Transact-SQL syntax for SQL Server 2014 (12.x) and earlier versions, see Previous versions documentation.

Arguments

order_by_expression
Specifies a column or expression on which to sort the query result set. A sort column can be specified as a name or column alias, or a nonnegative integer representing the position of the column in the select list.

Multiple sort columns can be specified. Column names must be unique. The sequence of the sort columns in the ORDER BY clause defines the organization of the sorted result set. That is, the result set is sorted by the first column and then that ordered list is sorted by the second column, and so on.

The column names referenced in the ORDER BY clause must correspond to either a column or column alias in the select list or to a column defined in a table specified in the FROM clause without any ambiguities. If the ORDER BY clause references a column alias from the select list, the column alias must be used standalone, and not as a part of some expression in ORDER BY clause, for example:

SELECT SCHEMA_NAME(schema_id) AS SchemaName FROM sys.objects 
ORDER BY SchemaName; -- correct 
SELECT SCHEMA_NAME(schema_id) AS SchemaName FROM sys.objects 
ORDER BY SchemaName + ''; -- wrong

COLLATE collation_name
Specifies that the ORDER BY operation should be performed according to the collation specified in collation_name, and not according to the collation of the column as defined in the table or view. collation_name can be either a Windows collation name or a SQL collation name. For more information, see Collation and Unicode Support. COLLATE is applicable only for columns of type char, varchar, nchar, and nvarchar.

ASC | DESC
Specifies that the values in the specified column should be sorted in ascending or descending order. ASC sorts from the lowest value to highest value. DESC sorts from highest value to lowest value. ASC is the default sort order. Null values are treated as the lowest possible values.

OFFSET { integer_constant | offset_row_count_expression } { ROW | ROWS }
Specifies the number of rows to skip before it starts to return rows from the query expression. The value can be an integer constant or expression that is greater than or equal to zero.

Applies to: SQL Server 2012 (11.x) and later and Azure SQL Database.s

offset_row_count_expression can be a variable, parameter, or constant scalar subquery. When a subquery is used, it cannot reference any columns defined in the outer query scope. That is, it cannot be correlated with the outer query.

ROW and ROWS are synonyms and are provided for ANSI compatibility.

In query execution plans, the offset row count value is displayed in the Offset attribute of the TOP query operator.

FETCH { FIRST | NEXT } { integer_constant | fetch_row_count_expression } { ROW | ROWS } ONLY
Specifies the number of rows to return after the OFFSET clause has been processed. The value can be an integer constant or expression that is greater than or equal to one.

Applies to: SQL Server 2012 (11.x) and later and Azure SQL Database.

fetch_row_count_expression can be a variable, parameter, or constant scalar subquery. When a subquery is used, it cannot reference any columns defined in the outer query scope. That is, it cannot be correlated with the outer query.

FIRST and NEXT are synonyms and are provided for ANSI compatibility.

ROW and ROWS are synonyms and are provided for ANSI compatibility.

In query execution plans, the offset row count value is displayed in the Rows or Top attribute of the TOP query operator.

Best Practices

Avoid specifying integers in the ORDER BY clause as positional representations of the columns in the select list. For example, although a statement such as SELECT ProductID, Name FROM Production.Production ORDER BY 2 is valid, the statement is not as easily understood by others compared with specifying the actual column name. In addition, changes to the select list, such as changing the column order or adding new columns, requires modifying the ORDER BY clause in order to avoid unexpected results.

In a SELECT TOP (N) statement, always use an ORDER BY clause. This is the only way to predictably indicate which rows are affected by TOP. For more information, see TOP (Transact-SQL).

Interoperability

When used with a SELECT...INTO or INSERT...SELECT statement to insert rows from another source, the ORDER BY clause does not guarantee the rows are inserted in the specified order.

Using OFFSET and FETCH in a view does not change the updateability property of the view.

Limitations and Restrictions

There is no limit to the number of columns in the ORDER BY clause; however, the total size of the columns specified in an ORDER BY clause cannot exceed 8,060 bytes.

Columns of type ntext, text, image, geography, geometry, and xml cannot be used in an ORDER BY clause.

An integer or constant cannot be specified when order_by_expression appears in a ranking function. For more information, see OVER Clause (Transact-SQL).

If a table name is aliased in the FROM clause, only the alias name can be used to qualify its columns in the ORDER BY clause.

Column names and aliases specified in the ORDER BY clause must be defined in the select list if the SELECT statement contains one of the following clauses or operators:

  • UNION operator

  • EXCEPT operator

  • INTERSECT operator

  • SELECT DISTINCT

Additionally, when the statement includes a UNION, EXCEPT, or INTERSECT operator, the column names, or column aliases must be specified in the select list of the first (left-side) query.

In a query that uses UNION, EXCEPT, or INTERSECT operators, ORDER BY is allowed only at the end of the statement. This restriction applies only to when you specify UNION, EXCEPT, and INTERSECT in a top-level query and not in a subquery. See the Examples section that follows.

The ORDER BY clause is not valid in views, inline functions, derived tables, and subqueries, unless either the TOP or OFFSET and FETCH clauses are also specified. When ORDER BY is used in these objects, the clause is used only to determine the rows returned by the TOP clause or OFFSET and FETCH clauses. The ORDER BY clause does not guarantee ordered results when these constructs are queried, unless ORDER BY is also specified in the query itself.

OFFSET and FETCH are not supported in indexed views or in a view that is defined by using the CHECK OPTION clause.

OFFSET and FETCH can be used in any query that allows TOP and ORDER BY with the following limitations:

  • The OVER clause does not support OFFSET and FETCH.

  • OFFSET and FETCH cannot be specified directly in INSERT, UPDATE, MERGE, and DELETE statements, but can be specified in a subquery defined in these statements. For example, in the INSERT INTO SELECT statement, OFFSET and FETCH can be specified in the SELECT statement.

  • In a query that uses UNION, EXCEPT or INTERSECT operators, OFFSET and FETCH can only be specified in the final query that specifies the order of the query results.

  • TOP cannot be combined with OFFSET and FETCH in the same query expression (in the same query scope).

Using OFFSET and FETCH to limit the rows returned

We recommend that you use the OFFSET and FETCH clauses instead of the TOP clause to implement a query paging solution and limit the number of rows sent to a client application.

Using OFFSET and FETCH as a paging solution requires running the query one time for each "page" of data returned to the client application. For example, to return the results of a query in 10-row increments, you must execute the query one time to return rows 1 to 10 and then run the query again to return rows 11 to 20 and so on. Each query is independent and not related to each other in any way. This means that, unlike using a cursor in which the query is executed once and state is maintained on the server, the client application is responsible for tracking state. To achieve stable results between query requests using OFFSET and FETCH, the following conditions must be met:

  1. The underlying data that is used by the query must not change. That is, either the rows touched by the query are not updated or all requests for pages from the query are executed in a single transaction using either snapshot or serializable transaction isolation. For more information about these transaction isolation levels, see SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL (Transact-SQL).

  2. The ORDER BY clause contains a column or combination of columns that are guaranteed to be unique.

See the example "Running multiple queries in a single transaction" in the Examples section later in this topic.

If consistent execution plans are important in your paging solution, consider using the OPTIMIZE FOR query hint for the OFFSET and FETCH parameters. See "Specifying expressions for OFFSET and FETCH values" in the Examples section later in this topic. For more information about OPTIMIZE FOR, see Query Hints (Transact-SQL).

Examples

Category Featured syntax elements
Basic syntax ORDER BY
Specifying ascending and descending order DESC * ASC
Specifying a collation COLLATE
Specifying a conditional order CASE expression
Using ORDER BY in a ranking function Ranking functions
Limiting the number of rows returned OFFSET * FETCH
Using ORDER BY with UNION, EXCEPT, and INTERSECT UNION

Basic syntax

Examples in this section demonstrate the basic functionality of the ORDER BY clause using the minimum required syntax.

A. Specifying a single column defined in the select list

The following example orders the result set by the numeric ProductID column. Because a specific sort order is not specified, the default (ascending order) is used.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT ProductID, Name FROM Production.Product  
WHERE Name LIKE 'Lock Washer%'  
ORDER BY ProductID;  

B. Specifying a column that is not defined in the select list

The following example orders the result set by a column that is not included in the select list, but is defined in the table specified in the FROM clause.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT ProductID, Name, Color  
FROM Production.Product  
ORDER BY ListPrice;  

C. Specifying an alias as the sort column

The following example specifies the column alias SchemaName as the sort order column.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT name, SCHEMA_NAME(schema_id) AS SchemaName  
FROM sys.objects  
WHERE type = 'U'  
ORDER BY SchemaName;  

D. Specifying an expression as the sort column

The following example uses an expression as the sort column. The expression is defined by using the DATEPART function to sort the result set by the year in which employees were hired.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT BusinessEntityID, JobTitle, HireDate  
FROM HumanResources.Employee  
ORDER BY DATEPART(year, HireDate);  

Specifying ascending and descending sort order

A. Specifying a descending order

The following example orders the result set by the numeric column ProductID in descending order.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT ProductID, Name FROM Production.Product  
WHERE Name LIKE 'Lock Washer%'  
ORDER BY ProductID DESC;  

B. Specifying an ascending order

The following example orders the result set by the Name column in ascending order. The characters are sorted alphabetically, not numerically. That is, 10 sorts before 2.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT ProductID, Name FROM Production.Product  
WHERE Name LIKE 'Lock Washer%'  
ORDER BY Name ASC ;  

C. Specifying both ascending and descending order

The following example orders the result set by two columns. The query result set is first sorted in ascending order by the FirstName column and then sorted in descending order by the LastName column.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT LastName, FirstName FROM Person.Person  
WHERE LastName LIKE 'R%'  
ORDER BY FirstName ASC, LastName DESC ;  

Specifying a collation

The following example shows how specifying a collation in the ORDER BY clause can change the order in which the query results are returned. A table is created that contains a column defined by using a case-insensitive, accent-insensitive collation. Values are inserted with a variety of case and accent differences. Because a collation is not specified in the ORDER BY clause, the first query uses the collation of the column when sorting the values. In the second query, a case-sensitive, accent-sensitive collation is specified in the ORDER BY clause, which changes the order in which the rows are returned.

USE tempdb;  
GO  
CREATE TABLE #t1 (name NVARCHAR(15) COLLATE Latin1_General_CI_AI)  
GO  
INSERT INTO #t1 VALUES(N'Sánchez'),(N'Sanchez'),(N'sánchez'),(N'sanchez');  
  
-- This query uses the collation specified for the column 'name' for sorting.  
SELECT name  
FROM #t1  
ORDER BY name;  
-- This query uses the collation specified in the ORDER BY clause for sorting.  
SELECT name  
FROM #t1  
ORDER BY name COLLATE Latin1_General_CS_AS;  

Specifying a conditional order

The following examples use the CASE expression in an ORDER BY clause to conditionally determine the sort order of the rows based on a given column value. In the first example, the value in the SalariedFlag column of the HumanResources.Employee table is evaluated. Employees that have the SalariedFlag set to 1 are returned in order by the BusinessEntityID in descending order. Employees that have the SalariedFlag set to 0 are returned in order by the BusinessEntityID in ascending order. In the second example, the result set is ordered by the column TerritoryName when the column CountryRegionName is equal to 'United States' and by CountryRegionName for all other rows.

SELECT BusinessEntityID, SalariedFlag  
FROM HumanResources.Employee  
ORDER BY CASE SalariedFlag WHEN 1 THEN BusinessEntityID END DESC  
        ,CASE WHEN SalariedFlag = 0 THEN BusinessEntityID END;  
GO  
SELECT BusinessEntityID, LastName, TerritoryName, CountryRegionName  
FROM Sales.vSalesPerson  
WHERE TerritoryName IS NOT NULL  
ORDER BY CASE CountryRegionName WHEN 'United States' THEN TerritoryName  
         ELSE CountryRegionName END;  

Using ORDER BY in a ranking function

The following example uses the ORDER BY clause in the ranking functions ROW_NUMBER, RANK, DENSE_RANK, and NTILE.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT p.FirstName, p.LastName  
    ,ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY a.PostalCode) AS "Row Number"  
    ,RANK() OVER (ORDER BY a.PostalCode) AS "Rank"  
    ,DENSE_RANK() OVER (ORDER BY a.PostalCode) AS "Dense Rank"  
    ,NTILE(4) OVER (ORDER BY a.PostalCode) AS "Quartile"  
    ,s.SalesYTD, a.PostalCode  
FROM Sales.SalesPerson AS s   
    INNER JOIN Person.Person AS p   
        ON s.BusinessEntityID = p.BusinessEntityID  
    INNER JOIN Person.Address AS a   
        ON a.AddressID = p.BusinessEntityID  
WHERE TerritoryID IS NOT NULL AND SalesYTD <> 0;  

Limiting the number of rows returned

The following examples use OFFSET and FETCH to limit the number of rows returned by a query.

Applies to: SQL Server 2012 (11.x) and later and Azure SQL Database.

A. Specifying integer constants for OFFSET and FETCH values

The following example specifies an integer constant as the value for the OFFSET and FETCH clauses. The first query returns all rows sorted by the column DepartmentID. Compare the results returned by this query with the results of the two queries that follow it. The next query uses the clause OFFSET 5 ROWS to skip the first 5 rows and return all remaining rows. The final query uses the clause OFFSET 0 ROWS to start with the first row and then uses FETCH NEXT 10 ROWS ONLY to limit the rows returned to 10 rows from the sorted result set.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
-- Return all rows sorted by the column DepartmentID.  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID;  
  
-- Skip the first 5 rows from the sorted result set and return all remaining rows.  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID OFFSET 5 ROWS;  
  
-- Skip 0 rows and return only the first 10 rows from the sorted result set.  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID   
    OFFSET 0 ROWS  
    FETCH NEXT 10 ROWS ONLY;  

B. Specifying variables for OFFSET and FETCH values

The following example declares the variables @RowsToSkip and @FetchRows and specifies these variables in the OFFSET and FETCH clauses.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
-- Specifying variables for OFFSET and FETCH values    
DECLARE @RowsToSkip TINYINT = 2
      , @FetchRows TINYINT = 8;  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID ASC   
    OFFSET @RowsToSkip ROWS   
    FETCH NEXT @FetchRows ROWS ONLY;  

C. Specifying expressions for OFFSET and FETCH values

The following example uses the expression @StartingRowNumber - 1 to specify the OFFSET value and the expression @EndingRowNumber - @StartingRowNumber + 1 to specify the FETCH value. In addition, the query hint, OPTIMIZE FOR, is specified. This hint can be used to provide a particular value for a local variable when the query is compiled and optimized. The value is used only during query optimization, and not during query execution. For more information, see Query Hints (Transact-SQL).

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
  
-- Specifying expressions for OFFSET and FETCH values      
DECLARE @StartingRowNumber TINYINT = 1  
      , @EndingRowNumber TINYINT = 8;  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID ASC   
    OFFSET @StartingRowNumber - 1 ROWS   
    FETCH NEXT @EndingRowNumber - @StartingRowNumber + 1 ROWS ONLY  
OPTION ( OPTIMIZE FOR (@StartingRowNumber = 1, @EndingRowNumber = 20) );  

D. Specifying a constant scalar subquery for OFFSET and FETCH values

The following example uses a constant scalar subquery to define the value for the FETCH clause. The subquery returns a single value from the column PageSize in the table dbo.AppSettings.

-- Specifying a constant scalar subquery  
USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
CREATE TABLE dbo.AppSettings (AppSettingID INT NOT NULL, PageSize INT NOT NULL);  
GO  
INSERT INTO dbo.AppSettings VALUES(1, 10);  
GO  
DECLARE @StartingRowNumber TINYINT = 1;  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID ASC   
    OFFSET @StartingRowNumber ROWS   
    FETCH NEXT (SELECT PageSize FROM dbo.AppSettings WHERE AppSettingID = 1) ROWS ONLY;  

E. Running multiple queries in a single transaction

The following example shows one method of implementing a paging solution that ensures stable results are returned in all requests from the query. The query is executed in a single transaction using the snapshot isolation level, and the column specified in the ORDER BY clause ensures column uniqueness.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
  
-- Ensure the database can support the snapshot isolation level set for the query.  
IF (SELECT snapshot_isolation_state FROM sys.databases WHERE name = N'AdventureWorks2022') = 0  
    ALTER DATABASE AdventureWorks2022 SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON;  
GO  
  
-- Set the transaction isolation level  to SNAPSHOT for this query.  
SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT;  
GO  
  
-- Beginning the transaction.
BEGIN TRANSACTION;  
GO  
-- Declare and set the variables for the OFFSET and FETCH values.  
DECLARE @StartingRowNumber INT = 1  
      , @RowCountPerPage INT = 3;  
  
-- Create the condition to stop the transaction after all rows have been returned.  
WHILE (SELECT COUNT(*) FROM HumanResources.Department) >= @StartingRowNumber  
BEGIN  
  
-- Run the query until the stop condition is met.  
SELECT DepartmentID, Name, GroupName  
FROM HumanResources.Department  
ORDER BY DepartmentID ASC   
    OFFSET @StartingRowNumber - 1 ROWS   
    FETCH NEXT @RowCountPerPage ROWS ONLY;  
  
-- Increment @StartingRowNumber value.  
SET @StartingRowNumber = @StartingRowNumber + @RowCountPerPage;  
CONTINUE  
END;  
GO  
COMMIT TRANSACTION;  
GO  

Using ORDER BY with UNION, EXCEPT, and INTERSECT

When a query uses the UNION, EXCEPT, or INTERSECT operators, the ORDER BY clause must be specified at the end of the statement and the results of the combined queries are sorted. The following example returns all products that are red or yellow and sorts this combined list by the column ListPrice.

USE AdventureWorks2022;  
GO  
SELECT Name, Color, ListPrice  
FROM Production.Product  
WHERE Color = 'Red'  
-- ORDER BY cannot be specified here.  
UNION ALL  
SELECT Name, Color, ListPrice  
FROM Production.Product  
WHERE Color = 'Yellow'  
ORDER BY ListPrice ASC;  

Examples: Azure Synapse Analytics and Analytics Platform System (PDW)

The following example demonstrates ordering of a result set by the numerical EmployeeKey column in ascending order.

-- Uses AdventureWorks  
  
SELECT EmployeeKey, FirstName, LastName FROM DimEmployee  
WHERE LastName LIKE 'A%'  
ORDER BY EmployeeKey;  

The following example orders a result set by the numerical EmployeeKey column in descending order.

-- Uses AdventureWorks  
  
SELECT EmployeeKey, FirstName, LastName FROM DimEmployee  
WHERE LastName LIKE 'A%'  
ORDER BY EmployeeKey DESC;  

The following example orders a result set by the LastName column.

-- Uses AdventureWorks  
  
SELECT EmployeeKey, FirstName, LastName FROM DimEmployee  
WHERE LastName LIKE 'A%'  
ORDER BY LastName;  

The following example orders by two columns. This query first sorts in ascending order by the FirstName column, and then sorts common FirstName values in descending order by the LastName column.

-- Uses AdventureWorks  
  
SELECT EmployeeKey, FirstName, LastName FROM DimEmployee  
WHERE LastName LIKE 'A%'  
ORDER BY LastName, FirstName;  

See Also

Expressions (Transact-SQL)
SELECT (Transact-SQL)
FROM (Transact-SQL)
Ranking Functions (Transact-SQL)
TOP (Transact-SQL)
Query Hints (Transact-SQL)
EXCEPT and INTERSECT (Transact-SQL)
UNION (Transact-SQL)
CASE (Transact-SQL)