# Get A Quick Approximate Count Of A Table Really large PostgreSQL tables can be slow to work with. Even a count of the rows in a really large table can take a while to tabulate. I'm talking about tables on the order of hundreds of millions of rows. For instance, here is a query grabbing the count of a ~400 million row table. ```sql > select count(*) from events; count ----------- 427462316 (1 row) Time: 55113.794 ms ``` If I'm willing to wait nearly a minute (55 seconds), I can get an accurate count of the rows in this `events` table. If I don't want to wait and an approximate count will do, there are faster ways. One way is to query the `pg_class` table. ``` > select reltuples::numeric as count from pg_class where relname='events'; count ----------- 427462000 (1 row) Time: 0.413 ms ``` The resulting count is within hundreds of the actual value and tells me what I need to know. And instead of 55 seconds, it takes less than half a millisecond. [source](https://andyatkinson.com/postgresql-tips)