Remote tables

  • Release version: Australia
  • Updated March 12, 2026
  • 5 minutes to read
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    Summary of Remote Tables

    Remote tables allow ServiceNow customers to connect the ServiceNow AI Platform with third-party sources or other instances to retrieve external data. This data can be temporarily cached in memory, viewed in lists or forms, and manipulated using standard Glide scripts without importing it into the ServiceNow database. Customers can also perform editing operations if enabled, allowing for data insertion, updates, and deletions directly from the remote table.

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    Key Features

    • Remote Tables: Define the schema for external data, similar to internal tables, with records sourced from external queries instead of the ServiceNow database.
    • Script Definitions: Create scripts to manage data retrieval and caching, with options for query, insert, update, and delete operations.
    • Data Lifecycle: Retrieved data is transient, existing in memory only during the session unless caching parameters are set, which can retain data for a specified duration.
    • Post-filtering and Sorting: Apply additional filtering and sorting after data retrieval, ensuring queries function like standard internal table queries.
    • Integration Hub Decision: Choose remote tables for temporary data caching and Integration Hub for advanced data processing and custom integrations.

    Key Outcomes

    By implementing remote tables, ServiceNow customers can efficiently access and utilize external data for various applications without permanent storage in the ServiceNow platform. This functionality supports dynamic data retrieval for scenarios like displaying weather information, customer details from CRMs, or personnel data from HCM applications. Additionally, customers can enable session debugging for better script management and must consider domain separation limitations when utilizing remote tables.

    Connect the ServiceNow AI Platform to third-party sources, or to another instance, so that you can retrieve external data and optionally cache it in memory.

    You can view external data in lists or forms and process it with standard Glide scripts. You can also group, sort, aggregate, and filter the data just like you would for standard internal tables. If editing is enabled for a remote table, you can insert, update, and delete data in the external source from the remote table on the instance.

    Remote table components

    Use the following components to build an external data framework:
    Remote tables
    You create remote tables to describe the schema for the data that you want to retrieve from an external source.

    The table definition is in the ServiceNow AI Platform, but its rows, or external records, live in memory. You create a remote table the same way that you would create a standard internal table. You define columns and controls and designate application access for it just like you would do for an internal table. Unlike an internal table, a remote table doesn’t get its records from the ServiceNow AI Platform database. It gets its records from running an associated query script against an external data source.

    To learn more about creating remote tables, see Create a remote table.

    Script definitions
    You create and associate script definitions with a remote table. The external data that you retrieved using the query script can be cached in memory. You can also designate how this data is cached and how long the data is cached in memory. Every time that you refresh a list that contains the external data from a remote table, the associated query script runs again. For editable remote tables, you can create insert, update, and delete script definitions in addition to the query script definition.

    To learn more about script definitions and how to associate them with a remote table, see Create script definitions for a remote table.

    How remote tables work

    By using a remote table, you can retrieve the data from external sources or from another instance with REST or SOAP services. The external data lives in memory in read-only mode, which makes the data temporary, or transient, within the ServiceNow AI Platform. You can then view and update the external data without importing or storing it.

    You view the external data in lists or forms in the same way that you view internally stored data. You can manipulate this data by using standard Glide records, business rules, remote APIs, scripting, table reference fields, services, and development tools in the ServiceNow AI Platform. If editing is enabled for a remote table, you can insert, update, and delete data in the external source from the remote table on the instance.

    Important:
    If the data size that is retrieved from the external source is small, use the 1000 rows default limit in a remote table to minimize query times. If the retrieved data size is large and could be less performative, in the script definition, you can select the advanced Enhanced Capacity field to support a large number of rows.

    External data life cycle within the ServiceNow AI Platform

    The data that you retrieve from an external source has a finite duration, or life cycle, within the ServiceNow AI Platform.
    • When you run a script that is associated with a remote table, the retrieved data lives in memory for as long as the list or form appears. After you close the list or form, that external data is purged from memory. The next time that you use or view the external data in this remote table, memory is repopulated from the external system.
    • However, if you have defined caching parameters for the script, the external data remains cached in memory for the specified caching duration.

      For example, if you designate that the external data should be cached for 300 seconds, it remains cached in memory for 5 minutes. After that time expires, the cached data is purged from memory. The next time that you use or view the external data in this remote table, the cache is refreshed from the external system.

    Practical applications for remote tables

    Set up and use remote tables in your enterprise when:

    • You want to fetch external data for temporary use without storing it in the ServiceNow AI Platform. For example, you can create a remote table that fetches weather-related data that appears on a home page when a user logs in. You would then create an associated query script definition that retrieves this data from a third-party weather source that is based on the user's location.
    • You want to retrieve customer details that are stored in an external Customer Relationship Management (CRM) application for viewing in Customer Service Management functions such as Agent Workspace.
      Note:
      To learn more about data retrieval for Customer Service Management, see Third-party data integration for CSM.
    • You want to retrieve and view personnel data from Human Capital Management (HCM) applications such as Workday or SAP SuccessFactors for use in HR Service Delivery functions.

    Post-filtering and sorting

    When you run a remote table script, it applies post-filtering and sorting query conditions after it adds rows to a table. These applied conditions support any other required queries that the script doesn’t handle. When you apply post-filtering and sorting, the remote table queries work like standard internal table queries.

    When you create remote table scripts, you generally handle the most frequent and expansive queries in the script. Post-filtering queries and sorting can take a long time and might adversely affect how your instance performs. Use a small data set instead so that it doesn't take much time to do post-filtering and sorting.

    Based on your use cases, determine if you should try a narrower query in the external call or a more expansive query. Because the internal filtering and sorting can be expensive to run on large result sets, use a narrower query when the data doesn't require extra filtering. Use a more expansive query when a more general query would return a small result set and would require extra filtering and sorting.

    Differences between remote tables and the Integration Hub

    Choose whether to use a remote table or Integration Hub to process external data.
    • When you want to cache external data temporarily, use remote tables.
    • If you want more advanced importing and transformation options, including Workflow Studio, or if you want to develop custom integrations, use the Integration Hub.
    Note:
    If you create a remote table that uses the data from an external source that is outside of the ServiceNow AI Platform, you must have an Integration Hub subscription entitlement. To learn more about the Integration Hub, see Integration Hub.