Frits Jalvingh <jal@xxxxxx> writes: > I have attached both plans, both made with set enable_nestloop = false in > the attachments. The reason why you're getting a nested loop is that the planner has no other choice. The "tijd" table has no join conditions that would be amenable to hash- or merge-joining it to something else, because both of those join methods require a plain equality join condition. AFAICS in a quick look, all of tijd's join conditions look more like Join Filter: ((di04238cluster.dv_start_dts <= tijd.einddatum) AND (di04238cluster.dv_end_dts > tijd.einddatum)) which is not amenable to anything except brute force cross-join-and- test-the-condition. Given that, it's likely that "enable_nestloop = false" is making things worse not better, by artificially distorting the plan shape. Seeing the large number of joins involved, I wonder what your geqo_threshold, join_collapse_limit, and from_collapse_limit settings are, and whether you can get a better plan by increasing them. The planner doesn't seem to think that any of these joins involve a very large number of rows, so I doubt that your work_mem setting is very relevant. However, are these rowcount estimates accurate? You claimed upthread that you were dealing with hundreds of millions of rows, but it's impossible to credit that cost estimates like -> Seq Scan on s_h_cluster_ssm di01905cluster (cost=0.00..155.05 rows=1072 width=24) Filter: (soort = 'FIN'::text) correspond to scanning large tables. In the end, I fear that finding a way to get rid of those inequality join conditions may be your only real answer. regards, tom lane