How to do time-based breakdowns (hour, minute, real time)

Jul 27, 2023

By default, PostHog provides an easy way to group events by week, day, and even hour. Sometimes, smaller, more specific breakdowns are required. With HogQL, you can break down events by time of day, hourly, and even minute-by-minute to help you do a detailed analysis of when they happen, and this tutorial shows you how to do that.

Time of day breakdown

We start with an easy scenario: breaking down what part of the day events take place in. To do this, we create an insight and then break it down by checking if the event timestamp is in the morning, afternoon, evening, or night. We use a HogQL multiIf() expression using the hours of the day to check against toHour(timestamp) like so:

SQL
multiIf(
5 >= toHour(timestamp) and toHour(timestamp) < 12, 'morning',
12 >= toHour(timestamp) and toHour(timestamp) < 17, 'afternoon',
17 >= toHour(timestamp) and toHour(timestamp) < 20, 'evening',
'night'
)

You can visualize this with a total value bar chart to the sums for the date range or time series bar to see how they change day to day.

Time of day

Note: Event timestamps default to UTC. You need to adjust your times depending on your local time. For example, if you are in Pacific Daylight Time, subtract 7 hours from UTC timestamps to match your local time.

Hourly breakdown

PostHog enables you to group data by hour for single-day date ranges. If you want to sum these values across ranges longer than one day, you can break it down by toHour(timestamp) and, once again, use a total value or time series bar chart to visualize.

Hourly breakdowns

Minute-by-minute breakdown

If hourly isn’t enough for you, we can move down to by the minute. We use an SQL insight for this. To make one, select the "SQL" tab when creating an insight. In this insight, we select a formatted count of toStartOfMinute(timestamp) where the timestamp is in the past day and order by the time (minute). In HogQL, this looks like this:

SQL
select
formatDateTime(toStartOfMinute(timestamp), '%T') AS minute,
count(*)
from events
where timestamp > now() - interval 1 day
group by minute
order by minute desc
limit 100

If instead, you care about which minutes have the highest count, you can order by count(*) instead of minute.

SQL
select toStartOfMinute(timestamp)as minute, count(*)
from events
where timestamp > now() - interval 1 day
group by minute
order by count(*) desc
limit 100

HogQL also includes functions to get events for every 5, 10, and 15 minutes. To do this, replace toStartOfMinute with toStartOfFiveMinutes, toStartOfTenMinutes, and toStartOfFifteenMinutes .

Real time filtering

Even minute-by-minute analysis might not be good enough for some people. They want a real time understanding of their analytics. To do this in PostHog, we can filter for events within a time frame. Because it takes time to ingest events into PostHog, we recommend using a 5-30 minutes filter as "real time."

To set up one of these filters, add a filter to your series or dashboard, select HogQL, then use a dateDiff() comparing the timestamp to the current time like this:

SQL
dateDiff('minute', timestamp, now()) < 5

You can use this filter on specific insights or on an entire dashboard. As example, below we use the filter to get the number of unique sessions in the last 5 minutes:

Real time filter

To help you get set up faster with this, you can use our real time dashboard template which has basic insights and real time filters set up for you.

Further reading

Subscribe to our newsletter

Product for Engineers

Join 25k+ subscribers learning how to build successful products and become better engineers.

We'll share your email with Substack

Comments