Ever felt like a genius while stacking a dozen union queries together, only to discover later you've created a hair-pulling maintenance mess? You're not alone. Combining data in Microsoft Access - especially when you start getting clever with queries - can look fantastic at first and then quietly set you up for major headaches down the road. Today, I'm going to walk you through why some shortcuts look smart at first, where they typically backfire, and how to structure your database sanity for the long run. We'll also hit some other common Access questions straight from the trenches, like forms behaving badly, joins that seem to have a mind of their own, and head-scratchers about imports and data corruption. Let's get into it.

Let's kick off with a classic scenario: you've got a dozen tables, all with the same fields, and at some point, someone says, "Hey, can we just pull all that data together in one report?" The knee-jerk reaction might be to toss together a union query. Sure, it gives you a combined list, and for small datasets or one-off lists, that trick is fine. But when you start adding grouping, sorting, and calculations - especially stacked over 13 tables - things can get hairy. If you find yourself nesting GROUP BY inside union queries, it's really time to pump the brakes.
Here's why: in Access, union queries are great for merging similar datasets - think employees, vendors, and sales reps when you want one big people list. But they're a pain when you need to perform more complex operations. The moment you want to summarize, aggregate, or sort on fields that aren't neatly aligned in every table, you'll start running into reserved word collisions and cryptic syntax errors. "Name," "Type," "ID" - these innocent-sounding labels can make your query explode and the error messages are never as helpful as they pretend to be. You'll see the notorious "not part of an aggregate function" error as soon as you try grouping by anything that isn't handled right.
What's the sane solution? Staging tables. Instead of running wacky union gymnastics every time, just create a temporary (or staging) table. Append data from all your individual sources into that one spot, then run your summaries and sorts as needed. Maintenance becomes so much easier. Need to add table number 14? Just append that too - zero stress. Not only does this approach cut down on bugs, it's also easier for future you (or someone else) to understand, troubleshoot, and build upon. If you want to see all the nitty-gritty on how to set up such staging tables, check out the video above for the walkthrough.
Now, let's talk quirky forms and join logic - because if you've ever wondered why changing join types didn't seem to affect your Access results, you're far from alone. Take this common story: a user noticed that his player list was showing names even when there was no associated card data. The reason? Outer joins. With a left outer join, Access will show every record from one table, whether there's a matching record in the second table or not. Want to see only players with card data? You need an inner join. And here's a gotcha: the query builder's settings override what you see in the Relationships window. Changing relationships there does not change existing query joins - the query itself calls the shots. Double-click the join line in the query design view and set it directly. For a deeper dive, my Access Beginner and Expert courses are packed with join troubleshooting tips.
A quick word on zero-length strings, spaces, and nulls, because this subtlety will sneak up on people. A zero-length string is literally an empty string - a conscious blank, like when you ask someone for a middle name and they have none. A single space character, which is totally different, is like someone hitting the spacebar once. And null doesn't mean blank at all; it means "unknown, wasn't asked, maybe empty, maybe not." This distinction matters: Access stores and recognizes all three separately. Don't let your fields get cluttered with hidden blanks or nulls thinking they're all the same. Dig into my dedicated videos for real-life examples, and brace yourself - null math gets wild.
Let's move on to importing from Excel - especially when you're stuck with real-world spreadsheets full of actual names or descriptions rather than handy ID numbers. The best practice is: dump that data into a staging table first. Then, use update queries to match up foreign keys (IDs from related tables) before finally appending everything into your real tables. This lets you validate, clean, and trace your data before it hits your core system, keeping your database cleaner and your hairline intact (or at least not more receded than it already is).
On the subject of keeping things healthy, let's talk network setups and data corruption. Access databases are good team players in a small, stable local office. But as soon as you put your backend on a flaky Wi-Fi, a VPN, or try opening it across the internet, it's open season for corruption. Database connections can drop unpredictably, leaving half-finished writes and messy files. Good hardware - wires, switches, solid infrastructure - makes a world of difference. But if you keep running into corruption, that's your sign to consider SQL Server. SQL Server acts as a gatekeeper, never leaving your main file exposed, and users work through the server so dropped connections won't corrupt your data. Trust me, you don't want to learn this the hard way.
When is it time to redesign that legacy Access database from the Windows 3.1 days? The answer is: whenever your app starts feeling sluggish, overloaded, or you simply can't trace which chunk of code does what anymore. Rebuild intentionally based on what you actually use today - not the feature set you needed in 1997. Take stock, map your needs, and build with the benefit of experience. You'll wind up with a much tighter, more modern system and probably eliminate more bloat than you think possible.
Let's jump to another common question: Is Access still relevant? Absolutely. Microsoft's investing in the Power Platform and Azure, but Access remains the fastest, easiest way to build powerful desktop applications. Its role as a front end for SQL Server and Azure SQL is stronger than ever. You can start with a stand-alone Access database, then, as your business grows, migrate up to a SQL Server or even a hybrid cloud setup. And thanks to Access's rapid application tools, you don't lose your existing effort. My roadmap includes a lot of training on exactly this integration, so stay tuned if you're thinking about scaling up.
Let's talk about reports for a second. Are they still worth using if you never print a page? For sure. Reports shine when you need structured, polished output - whether that's for PDF exports, email summaries, dashboards, or "pretty" data layouts. Data sheets and forms work for day-to-day operations, but reports let you control exactly what users see and how it's formatted. And if you're trying to split a long text field across two columns, that's not natively supported - multi-column layouts handle records, not field-wrapping. You could pull it off by splitting your text into smaller chunks, but you'd need a little VBA trickery (and probably a temp table). If you want to learn more about those workarounds, check out the video above and watch for future tutorials.
For anyone thinking you can "secure" your database by simply renaming it with an ACCDR extension to hide the tables - bad news. ACCDR just launches Access in runtime mode, with the simplified interface, but does nothing for securing your data. If you want to truly protect your design and code, you need an ACCDE. For real back-end data security, SQL Server is the only way to go. Table renaming and interface tweaks are just mild annoyances for anyone who knows their way around Access.
Curious about running Access on a tablet? If you've got a full Windows tablet (think Microsoft Surface), you're good to go. But if we're talking iPad or Android? Sorry, Access doesn't run there natively. You can remote desktop into a Windows PC, or (with more ambition) move your data to SQL Server and create a web or platform-agnostic front end. And here's the biggie: even with a Windows tablet, don't use Access over Wi-Fi for anything mission-critical - wireless connections and Access databases are a corruption party waiting to happen. SQL Server solves that too. See a pattern?
On a lighter note, appreciate all your feedback on dark mode. Most users prefer it - it's easier on the eyes for those late-night coding sessions. If you want to send complaints, just remember to fold them into sharp corners first. Jokes aside, I read every comment and truly value your input.
Finally, let's set the record straight: Access can work as a full stand-alone solution (back and front end on a simple file share), as a rapid front end for enterprise-grade SQL Server or cloud data, or as part of a hybrid with web and mobile components. The trick is knowing what fits your business, your infrastructure, and your team.
So, what's the real lesson today? When it comes to combining data, keep it simple and maintainable - use temp tables instead of tangled union queries for larger processes. Split up your logic, don't be afraid to break things into smaller, saved queries, and take advantage of staging areas to clean and validate your data before it ever touches the core. That's how you build an Access database that stands the test of time and change.
As always, feel free to drop your questions or stories below. Let me know what obstacles you're facing and how you plan to use these best practices in your own systems. For the deep dives, walk-throughs, and more tips, check the embedded video above. And don't forget to check out the other resources and links I mention in the video description for further learning.
Live long and prosper,
RR

