SQL Wildcards
SQL Wildcard Characters
A wildcard character is used to substitute one or more characters in a string.
Wildcard characters are used with the 
LIKE 
operator. The LIKE operator is used in a 
WHERE clause to search for a specified pattern in a column.
Example
Return all customers that starts with the letter 'a':
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a%'; 
  Try it Yourself »
Wildcard Characters
| Symbol | Description | 
|---|---|
| % | Represents zero or more characters | 
| _ | Represents a single character | 
| [] | Represents any single character within the brackets * | 
| ^ | Represents any character not in the brackets * | 
| - | Represents any single character within the specified range * | 
| {} | Represents any escaped character ** | 
* Not supported in PostgreSQL and MySQL databases.
** Supported only in Oracle databases.
Demo Database
Below is a selection from the Customers table used in the examples:
| CustomerID | CustomerName | ContactName | Address | City | PostalCode | Country | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 
    Alfreds Futterkiste | Maria Anders | Obere Str. 57 | Berlin | 12209 | Germany | 
| 2 | Ana Trujillo Emparedados y helados | Ana Trujillo | Avda. de la Constitución 2222 | México D.F. | 05021 | Mexico | 
| 3 | Antonio Moreno Taquería | Antonio Moreno | Mataderos 2312 | México D.F. | 05023 | Mexico | 
| 4 | 
    Around the Horn | Thomas Hardy | 120 Hanover Sq. | London | WA1 1DP | UK | 
| 5 | Berglunds snabbköp | Christina Berglund | Berguvsvägen 8 | Luleå | S-958 22 | Sweden | 
Using the % Wildcard
The % wildcard represents any number of characters, even zero characters.
Example
Return all customers that ends with the pattern 'es':
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%es';
  Try it Yourself »
Example
Return all customers that contains the pattern 'mer':
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE CustomerName LIKE '%mer%';
  Try it Yourself »
Using the _ Wildcard
The _ wildcard represents a single character.
It can be any character or number, but each _ represents one, and only one, character.
Example
Return all customers with a City starting with any character, followed by "ondon":
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE City LIKE '_ondon';
 Try it Yourself »
Example
Return all customers with a City starting with "L", followed by any 
3 characters, ending with "on":
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE City LIKE 'L___on';
  Try it Yourself »
Using the [] Wildcard
The [] wildcard returns a result if any
of the characters inside gets a match.
Example
Return all customers starting with either "b", "s", or "p":
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE CustomerName LIKE '[bsp]%';
 Try it Yourself »
Using the - Wildcard
The - wildcard allows you to specify a range 
of characters inside the [] wildcard.
Example
Return all customers starting with "a", "b", "c", "d", "e" or "f":
 SELECT * FROM Customers
 WHERE CustomerName LIKE '[a-f]%';
 Try it Yourself »
Combine Wildcards
Any wildcard, like % and _ 
, can be used in combination with other 
wildcards.
Example
Return all customers that starts with "a" and are at least 3 characters in length:
 SELECT * FROM Customers
  WHERE CustomerName LIKE 'a__%';
  Try it Yourself »
Example
Return all customers that have "r" in the second position:
 SELECT * FROM Customers
  WHERE CustomerName LIKE '_r%';
 Try it Yourself »
Without Wildcard
If no wildcard is specified, the phrase has to have an exact match to return a result.
Example
Return all customers from Spain:
 SELECT * FROM Customers
  WHERE Country 
  LIKE 'Spain';
 Try it Yourself »
Microsoft Access Wildcards
The Microsoft Access Database has some other wildcards:
| Symbol | Description | Example | 
|---|---|---|
| * | Represents zero or more characters | bl* finds bl, black, blue, and blob | 
| ? | Represents a single character | h?t finds hot, hat, and hit | 
| [] | Represents any single character within the brackets | h[oa]t finds hot and hat, but not hit | 
| ! | Represents any character not in the brackets | h[!oa]t finds hit, but not hot and hat | 
| - | Represents any single character within the specified range | c[a-b]t finds cat and cbt | 
| # | Represents any single numeric character | 2#5 finds 205, 215, 225, 235, 245, 255, 265, 275, 285, and 295 |