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Home/ Questions/Q 8126591
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T07:12:07+00:00 2026-06-06T07:12:07+00:00

The title pretty much sums up my question. When is it more efficient to

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The title pretty much sums up my question.

When is it more efficient to generate a static page, that a user can access, as apposed to using dynamically generated pages that query a database? As in what situations would one be better than the other.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T07:12:09+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 7:12 am

    To serve up a static page, your web server just needs to read the page off the disk and send it. Virtually no processing will be required. If the page is frequently accessed, it will probably be cached in memory, so even the disk access will not be needed.

    Generating pages dynamically obviously has more overhead. There is a cost for every DB access you make, no matter how simple the query is. (On a project I worked on recently, I measured a minimum overhead of 0.7ms for each query, even for SELECT 1;) So if you can just generate a static page and save it to disk, page accesses will be faster. How much faster? It just depends on how much work is being done to generate the page dynamically. We don’t know what you are doing, so we can’t comment on that.

    Now, if you generate a static page and save it to disk, that means you need to re-generate it every time the data which went into generating that page changes. If the data changes more often than the page is actually accessed, you could be doing more work rather than less! But in most cases, that’s a very unlikely situation.

    More likely, the biggest problem you will experience from generating static pages and saving them to disk is coding (and maintaining) the logic for re-generating the pages whenever necessary. You will need to keep track of exactly what data goes into each page, and in every place in the code where data can be changed, you will need to invoke re-generation of all the relevant pages. If you forget just one, then your users may be looking at stale data some of the time.

    If you mix dynamic generation per-request and caching generated pages on disk, then your code will be harder to read and maintain, because of mixing the two styles.

    And you can’t really cache generated pages on disk in certain situations — like responding to POST requests which come from a form submission. Or imagine that when your users invoke certain actions, you have to send a request to a 3rd party API, and the data which comes back from that API will be used in the page. What comes back from the API may be different each time, so in this case, you need to generate the page dynamically each time.

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