--- slug: /en/sql-reference/statements/select/intersect sidebar_label: INTERSECT --- # INTERSECT Clause The `INTERSECT` clause returns only those rows that result from both the first and the second queries. The queries must match the number of columns, order, and type. The result of `INTERSECT` can contain duplicate rows. Multiple `INTERSECT` statements are executed left to right if parentheses are not specified. The `INTERSECT` operator has a higher priority than the `UNION` and `EXCEPT` clauses. ``` sql SELECT column1 [, column2 ] FROM table1 [WHERE condition] INTERSECT SELECT column1 [, column2 ] FROM table2 [WHERE condition] ``` The condition could be any expression based on your requirements. **Examples** Query: ``` sql SELECT number FROM numbers(1,10) INTERSECT SELECT number FROM numbers(3,6); ``` Result: ``` text ┌─number─┐ │ 3 │ │ 4 │ │ 5 │ │ 6 │ │ 7 │ │ 8 │ └────────┘ ``` Query: ``` sql CREATE TABLE t1(one String, two String, three String) ENGINE=Memory(); CREATE TABLE t2(four String, five String, six String) ENGINE=Memory(); INSERT INTO t1 VALUES ('q', 'm', 'b'), ('s', 'd', 'f'), ('l', 'p', 'o'), ('s', 'd', 'f'), ('s', 'd', 'f'), ('k', 't', 'd'), ('l', 'p', 'o'); INSERT INTO t2 VALUES ('q', 'm', 'b'), ('b', 'd', 'k'), ('s', 'y', 't'), ('s', 'd', 'f'), ('m', 'f', 'o'), ('k', 'k', 'd'); SELECT * FROM t1 INTERSECT SELECT * FROM t2; ``` Result: ``` text ┌─one─┬─two─┬─three─┐ │ q │ m │ b │ │ s │ d │ f │ │ s │ d │ f │ │ s │ d │ f │ └─────┴─────┴───────┘ ``` **See Also** - [UNION](union.md#union-clause) - [EXCEPT](except.md#except-clause)