Limits
Feature | Limit |
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Databases | 50,000 (Workers Paid) / 10 (Free) |
Maximum database size | 10 GB (Workers Paid) / 500 MB (Free) |
Maximum storage per account | 250 GB (Workers Paid)1 / 5 GB (Free) |
Time Travel duration (point-in-time recovery) | 30 days (Workers Paid) / 7 days (Free) |
Maximum Time Travel restore operations | 10 restores per 10 minute (per database) |
Queries per Worker invocation (read subrequest limits) | 50 (Bundled) / 1000 (Unbound) |
Maximum number of columns per table | 100 |
Maximum number of rows per table | Unlimited (excluding per-database storage limits) |
Maximum string, BLOB or table row size | 2,000,000 bytes (2 MB) |
Maximum SQL statement length | 100,000 bytes (100 KB) |
Maximum bound parameters per query | 100 |
Maximum arguments per SQL function | 32 |
Maximum characters (bytes) in a LIKE or GLOB pattern | 50 bytes |
Maximum bindings per Workers script | Approximately 5,000 2 |
Maximum SQL query duration | 30 seconds 3 |
Maximum file import (d1 execute ) size | 5 GiB 4 |
Cloudflare also offers other storage solutions such as Workers KV, Durable Objects, and R2. Each product has different advantages and limits. Refer to Choose a data or storage product to review which storage option is right for your use case.
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The maximum storage per account can be increased by request on Workers Paid and Enterprise plans. See the guidance on limit increases on this page to request an increase. ↩
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A single Worker script can have up to 1 MB of script metadata. A binding is defined as a binding to a resource, such as a D1 database, KV namespace, environmental variable or secret. Each resource binding is approximately 150-bytes, however environmental variables and secrets are controlled by the size of the value you provide. Excluding environmental variables, you can bind up to ~5,000 D1 databases to a single Worker script. ↩
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Requests to Cloudflare API must resolve in 30 seconds. Therefore, this duration limit also applies to the entire batch call. ↩
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The imported file is uploaded to R2. See R2 upload limit. ↩