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Home/ Questions/Q 3680184
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 19, 20262026-05-19T03:32:48+00:00 2026-05-19T03:32:48+00:00

We all know that we should rather reuse a JDBC PreparedStatement than creating a

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We all know that we should rather reuse a JDBC PreparedStatement than creating a new instance within a loop.

But how to deal with PreparedStatement reuse between different method invocations?
Does the reuse-“rule” still count?

Should I really consider using a field for the PreparedStatement or should I close and re-create the prepared statement in every invocation (keep it local)?
(Of course an instance of such a class would be bound to a Connection which might be a disadvantage in some architectures)

I am aware that the ideal answer might be “it depends”.
But I am looking for a best practice for less experienced developers that they will do the right choice in most of the cases.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-19T03:32:49+00:00Added an answer on May 19, 2026 at 3:32 am

    Of course an instance of such a class would be bound to a Connection which might be a disadvantage

    Might be? it would be a huge disadvantage. You’d either need to synchronize access to it, which would kill your multi-user performance stone-dead, or create multiple instances and keep them in a pool. Major pain in the ass.

    Statement pooling is the job of the JDBC driver, and most, if not all, of the current crop of drivers do this for you. When you call prepareStatement or prepareCall, the driver will handle re-use of existing resource and pre-compiled statements.

    Statement objects are tied to a connection, and connections should be used and returned to the pool as quickly as possible.

    In short, the standard practice of obtaining a PreparedStatement at the start of the method, using it repeatedly within a loop, then closing it at the end of the method, is best practice.

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