--- layout: default title: Cardinality parent: Metric aggregations grand_parent: Aggregations nav_order: 20 --- # Cardinality aggregations The `cardinality` metric is a single-value metric aggregation that counts the number of unique or distinct values of a field. The following example finds the number of unique products in an eCommerce store: ```json GET opensearch_dashboards_sample_data_ecommerce/_search { "size": 0, "aggs": { "unique_products": { "cardinality": { "field": "products.product_id" } } } } ``` {% include copy-curl.html %} #### Example response ```json ... "aggregations" : { "unique_products" : { "value" : 7033 } } } ``` Cardinality count is approximate. If you have tens of thousands of products in your hypothetical store, an accurate cardinality calculation requires loading all the values into a hash set and returning its size. This approach doesn't scale well; it requires huge amounts of memory and can cause high latencies. You can control the trade-off between memory and accuracy with the `precision_threshold` setting. This setting defines the threshold below which counts are expected to be close to accurate. Above this value, counts might become a bit less accurate. The default value of `precision_threshold` is 3,000. The maximum supported value is 40,000. ```json GET opensearch_dashboards_sample_data_ecommerce/_search { "size": 0, "aggs": { "unique_products": { "cardinality": { "field": "products.product_id", "precision_threshold": 10000 } } } } ```