How to Handle Divide by Zero In SQL Database: SQL PostgreSQL MS SQL Server Oracle Operators: NULLIF WHERE Problem: You want to perform division in your SQL query, but the denominator is an expression that can be zero. The database will give you an error when the denominator is in fact zero. Example: Our database has a table named investor_data with data in the following columns: id, investor_year, price_per_share, income, and expenses. idinvestor_yearprice_per_shareincomeexpenses 120162032002300 2201713020002000 3201840200100 420191559004900 Let’s divide the price per share by the difference between income and expenses to determine the P/E ratio (price-earnings ratio) for each year. Notice that there are cases when income equals expenses, so their difference will be zero. Thus, we need to find a way to avoid division by zero. Solution: SELECT investor_year, price_per_share/NULLIF(income-expenses, 0) AS P_E_ratio FROM investor data; This query returns the P/E ratio for each year as described in the problem statement: investor_yearP_E_ratio 20160.0222 2017NULL 20180.4000 20190.0150 If the difference between income and expenses is zero (as is the case for 2017), the NULLIF function changes the zero to a NULL value. Therefore, division by zero gives you NULL in the result. Discussion: If you’d like to handle division by zero gracefully, you can use the NULLIF function. NULLIF takes two arguments: the expression of interest, and the value you want to override. If the first argument is equal to the second, then NULLIF returns NULL; otherwise, it returns the first argument. You can use this function to handle a potential division by zero by wrapping the denominator in a call to NULLIF. In our example if the difference between income and expenses is zero, this value will be changed to NULL, and the denominator in the division will be NULL, not zero. Solution 2: Use WHERE Of course, in some situations, you can use a simpler solution: Just avoid division by zero by using WHERE with the comparison operator <>. In our example, we could check if income-expenses is different than 0. If it is, the calculation will be returned. SELECT investor_year, price_per_share/(income-expenses) AS P_E_ratio FROM investor data WHERE (income-expenses) <> 0 ; Note that with the WHERE solution, you’ll get fewer rows than there are in the investor_date table. The rows where income and expenses are equal will not be shown in the final result. Recommended courses: SQL Basics SQL Basics in SQL Server SQL Practice Set Subscribe to our newsletter Join our monthly newsletter to be notified about the latest posts. Email address How Do You Write a SELECT Statement in SQL? What Is a Foreign Key in SQL? Enumerate and Explain All the Basic Elements of an SQL Query