MySQL 9.5 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.5
        The utf8mb4 character set has these
        characteristics:
      
Supports BMP and supplementary characters.
Requires a maximum of four bytes per multibyte character.
        utf8mb4 contrasts with the
        utf8mb3 character set, which supports only
        BMP characters and uses a maximum of three bytes per character:
      
            For a BMP character, utf8mb4 and
            utf8mb3 have identical storage
            characteristics: same code values, same encoding, same
            length.
          
            For a supplementary character, utf8mb4
            requires four bytes to store it, whereas
            utf8mb3 cannot store the character at
            all. When converting utf8mb3 columns to
            utf8mb4, you need not worry about
            converting supplementary characters because there are none.
          
        utf8mb4 is a superset of
        utf8mb3, so for an operation such as the
        following concatenation, the result has character set
        utf8mb4 and the collation of
        utf8mb4_col:
      
SELECT CONCAT(utf8mb3_col, utf8mb4_col);
        Similarly, the following comparison in the
        WHERE clause works according to the collation
        of utf8mb4_col:
      
SELECT * FROM utf8mb3_tbl, utf8mb4_tbl WHERE utf8mb3_tbl.utf8mb3_col = utf8mb4_tbl.utf8mb4_col;
For information about data type storage as it relates to multibyte character sets, see String Type Storage Requirements.