State of

Databases

20

22

Every year we see new tools and techniques to build & manage databases, but there's not currently a way to track those changes and see how they evolve over time.

To separate the signal from the noise, this survey will take the pulse of the current databases that teams, individuals, startups, enterprises and hobbyists are using, as well as track the pay and demographic data of developers who are working with each stack.

Supported by

State of

Databases

20

22

Every year we see new tools and techniques to build & manage databases, but there's not currently a way to track those changes and see how they evolve over time.

To separate the signal from the noise, this survey will take the pulse of the current databases that teams, individuals, startups, enterprises and hobbyists are using, as well as track the pay and demographic data of developers who are working with each stack.

Supported by

State of

Databases

20

22

Every year we see new tools and techniques to build & manage databases, but there's not currently a way to track those changes and see how they evolve over time.

To separate the signal from the noise, this survey will take the pulse of the current databases that teams, individuals, startups, enterprises and hobbyists are using, as well as track the pay and demographic data of developers who are working with each stack.

Supported by