Recovering from DROP DATABASE in Neon

Whether you typed it yourself or your AI agent did, here's exactly what to do after a DROP DATABASE hit your Neon (Postgres) — best options first, honest about the rest.

First, in the next 60 seconds

  • 1. Stop all writes. Quit the app, pause the agent, and don't run another query — every write reduces what you can recover.
  • 2. Don't restart, vacuum, or checkpoint the database. Those steps can permanently overwrite recoverable data.
  • 3. Make a copy of the current state now (a dump, a snapshot, or the raw file) before you attempt anything.

What just happened

A DROP DATABASE removes every table, view and row at once. Recovery means restoring an entire backup or point-in-time copy — there is nothing left in the live database to salvage from.

Your recovery options in Neon, best first

  • 1

    Branch from a point in time

    Neon keeps a history of your data. In the console, create a new branch from a timestamp just before the destructive query, then point your app at that branch or copy the affected table back. This is Neon's single best recovery feature for exactly this situation.

  • 2

    Restore to a timestamp (time travel)

    Neon's restore lets you reset a branch to an earlier moment inside your history-retention window. Restore to just before the bad statement — only data written after that point is lost.

  • 3

    Roll back if the transaction is still open

    Neon is plain Postgres: if the destructive statement has not been committed yet, ROLLBACK; undoes it instantly.

  • 4

    Restore your own pg_dump

    If you (or OopsDB) took a pg_dump, restore it into a fresh Neon branch or database and copy the table back.

If you have no backup

Neon's history retention depends on your plan (e.g. 24 hours on free, longer on paid). If the destructive query is older than your retention window and you kept no dump, it is past Neon's reach. Check your retention setting now — and widen it.

Make sure this never happens again

The honest truth: your coding agent will eventually run DROP DATABASE again. The fix isn't to trust it more — it's to keep an automatic, recent snapshot so a bad query is a 30-second rollback instead of a lost weekend.

OopsDB takes an encrypted snapshot of your Neon (Postgres) every few minutes and restores it with one command. It's free, open-source, and runs entirely on your machine — set it up in two minutes and the next DROP DATABASE won't cost you anything.

See how it works

Free & open-source for local backups · optional €8/mo cloud vault keeps a copy off your machine · cancel anytime.

Related recovery guides

📋 The 8-step disaster checklist — print it before you need it
The exact first-10-minutes playbook from this guide, on one page. Get the link by email: