--- title: "YEAR (Transact-SQL)" description: "YEAR (Transact-SQL)" author: MikeRayMSFT ms.author: mikeray ms.reviewer: "" ms.date: "03/14/2017" ms.prod: sql ms.prod_service: "database-engine, sql-database, synapse-analytics, pdw" ms.technology: t-sql ms.topic: reference ms.custom: "" f1_keywords: - "YEAR" - "YEAR_TSQL" helpviewer_keywords: - "dates [SQL Server], functions" - "dates [SQL Server], years" - "date and time [SQL Server], YEAR" - "functions [SQL Server], date and time" - "YEAR function [SQL Server]" - "dateparts [SQL Server], year" dev_langs: - "TSQL" monikerRange: ">= aps-pdw-2016 || = azuresqldb-current || = azure-sqldw-latest || >= sql-server-2016 || >= sql-server-linux-2017 || = azuresqldb-mi-current" --- # YEAR (Transact-SQL) [!INCLUDE [sql-asdb-asdbmi-asa-pdw](../../includes/applies-to-version/sql-asdb-asdbmi-asa-pdw.md)] Returns an integer that represents the year of the specified *date*. For an overview of all [!INCLUDE[tsql](../../includes/tsql-md.md)] date and time data types and functions, see [Date and Time Data Types and Functions (Transact-SQL)](../../t-sql/functions/date-and-time-data-types-and-functions-transact-sql.md). ![Topic link icon](../../database-engine/configure-windows/media/topic-link.gif "Topic link icon") [Transact-SQL Syntax Conventions](../../t-sql/language-elements/transact-sql-syntax-conventions-transact-sql.md) ## Syntax ```syntaxsql YEAR ( date ) ``` [!INCLUDE[sql-server-tsql-previous-offline-documentation](../../includes/sql-server-tsql-previous-offline-documentation.md)] ## Arguments *date* Is an expression that can be resolved to a **time**, **date**, **smalldatetime**, **datetime**, **datetime2**, or **datetimeoffset** value. The *date* argument can be an expression, column expression, user-defined variable or string literal. ## Return Types **int** ## Return Value YEAR returns the same value as [DATEPART](../../t-sql/functions/datepart-transact-sql.md) (**year**, *date*). If *date* only contains a time part, the return value is 1900, the base year. ## Examples The following statement returns `2010`. This is the number of the year. ```sql SELECT YEAR('2010-04-30T01:01:01.1234567-07:00'); ``` The following statement returns `1900, 1, 1`. The argument for *date* is the number `0`. [!INCLUDE[ssNoVersion](../../includes/ssnoversion-md.md)] interprets `0` as January 1, 1900. ```sql SELECT YEAR(0), MONTH(0), DAY(0); ``` ## Examples: [!INCLUDE[ssSDWfull](../../includes/sssdwfull-md.md)] and [!INCLUDE[ssPDW](../../includes/sspdw-md.md)] The following statement returns `1900, 1, 1`. The argument for *date* is the number `0`. [!INCLUDE[ssNoVersion](../../includes/ssnoversion-md.md)] interprets `0` as January 1, 1900. ```sql SELECT TOP 1 YEAR(0), MONTH(0), DAY(0); ``` ## See Also [CAST and CONVERT (Transact-SQL)](../../t-sql/functions/cast-and-convert-transact-sql.md)