The Data types reference sheet

The Data types reference sheet
The columns 8, 9, 10 shows what versions of SQL Server that supports the data type
  • 8 = SQL Server 2000
  • 9 = SQL Server 2005
  • 10 = SQL Server 2008
Datatype Min Max Storage 8 9 10 Type Notes
Bigint -2^63 2^63-1 8 bytes       Exact numeric  
Int -2,147,483,648 2,147,483,647 4 bytes       Exact numeric  
Smallint -32,768 32,767 2 bytes       Exact numeric  
Tinyint 0 255 1 bytes       Exact numeric  
Bit 0 1 1 to 8 bit columns in the same table requires a total of 1 byte, 9 to 16 bits = 2 bytes, etc...       Exact numeric  
Decimal -10^38+1 10^38–1 Precision 1-9 = 5 bytes, precision 10-19 = 9 bytes, precision 20-28 = 13 bytes, precision 29-38 = 17 bytes        Exact numeric Decimal and numeric data type is exactly the same. Precision is the total number of digits. Scale is the number of decimals. For booth the minimum is 1 and the maximum is 38.
Numeric no              
Money -2^63 / 10000 2^63-1 / 10000 8 bytes       Exact numeric  
Smallmoney -214,748.3648 214,748.3647 4 bytes       Exact numeric  
Float -1.79E + 308 1.79E + 308 4 bytes when precision is less than 25 and 8 bytes when precision is 25 through 53       Approximate numerics Precision is specified from 1 to 53.
Real -3.40E + 38 3.40E + 38 4 bytes       Approximate numerics Precision is fixed to 7.
Datetime 1753-01-01 00:00:00.000 9999-12-31 23:59:59.997 8 bytes       Date and time If you are running SQL Server 2008 and need milliseconds precision, use datetime2(3) instead to save 1 byte.
Smalldatetime  1900-01-01 00:00 2079-06-06 23:59         Date and time  
Date 0001-01-01 9999-12-31   no no   Date and time  
Time 00:00:00.0000000 23:59:59.9999999   no no   Date and time Specifying the precision is possible. TIME(3) will have milliseconds precision. TIME(7) is the highest and the default precision. Casting values to a lower precision will round the value.
Datetime2 0001-01-01 00:00:00.0000000 9999-12-31 23:59:59.9999999 Presicion 1-2 = 6 bytes precision 3-4 = 7 bytes precision 5-7 = 8 bytes no no   Date and time Combines the date datatype and the time datatype into one. The precision logic is the same as for the time datatype.
Datetimeoffset 0001-01-01 00:00:00.0000000 -14:00 9999-12-31 23:59:59.9999999 +14:00 Presicion 1-2 = 8 bytes precision 3-4 = 9 bytes precision 5-7 = 10 bytes no no   Date and time Is a datetime2 datatype with the UTC offset appended.
Char 0 chars 8000 chars Defined width       Character string Fixed width
Varchar 0 chars 8000 chars 2 bytes + number of chars       Character string Variable width
Varchar(max) 0 chars 2^31 chars 2 bytes + number of chars no     Character string Variable width
Text 0 chars 2,147,483,647 chars 4 bytes + number of chars       Character string Variable width
Nchar 0 chars 4000 chars Defined width x 2       Unicode character string Fixed width
Nvarchar 0 chars 4000 chars         Unicode character string Variable width
Nvarchar(max) 0 chars 2^30 chars   no     Unicode character string Variable width
Ntext 0 chars 1,073,741,823 chars         Unicode character string Variable width
Binary 0 bytes 8000 bytes         Binary string Fixed width
Varbinary 0 bytes 8000 bytes         Binary string Variable width
Varbinary(max) 0 bytes 2^31 bytes   no     Binary string Variable width
Image 0 bytes 2,147,483,647 bytes         Binary string Variable width
Sql_variant             Other Stores values of various SQL Server-supported data types, except text, ntext, and timestamp.
Timestamp             Other Stores a database-wide unique number that gets updated every time a row gets updated.
Uniqueidentifier             Other Stores a globally unique identifier (GUID).
Xml       no     Other Stores XML data. You can store xml instances in a column or a variable.
Cursor             Other A reference to a cursor.
Table             Other Stores a result set for later processing.

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