Steps to Troubleshoot "django.db.utils.ProgrammingError: permission denied for relation django_migrations"
I was able to solve my issue based on instructions from this question. Basically, postgres privileges needed to be re-granted to the db user. In my case, that was the user I had setup in the virtual environment settings file. Run the following from the commandline (or within postgres) where mydatabase
and dbuser
should be your own database and user names:
psql mydatabase -c "GRANT ALL ON ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA public to dbuser;"
psql mydatabase -c "GRANT ALL ON ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA public to dbuser;"
psql mydatabase -c "GRANT ALL ON ALL FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA public to dbuser;"
As mentioned by @user3062149, this is likely caused by attempting to migrate a database table for which Django's psycopg2 user is not the table owner. For instance, if you have in your project's settings.py
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'USER': 'my_username',
# ...
You will need to check that the table involved in the Django migration is owned by my_username
. To do this in psql
, you can use SELECT * FROM pg_tables ORDER BY tableowner;
. This uses the view pg_tables
, which "provides access to useful information about each table in the database." pg_tables
is a part of Postgres' system catalogs, the place where a relational database management system stores schema metadata.
Say that the table in question is owned by other_username
(not my_username
).
To update the owner, you then need to call psql
with --username=other_username
, then change the owner:
ALTER TABLE public.<table_name> OWNER TO my_username;
If you receive this error and are using the Heroku hosting platform its quite possible that you are trying to write to a Hobby level database which has a limited number of rows.
Heroku will allow you to pg:push
the database even if you exceed the limits, but it will be read-only so any modifications to content won't be processed and will throw this error.