You probably read before that you can set a default Response Status Code. But in some cases you need to return a different status code than the default. ## Use case For example, imagine that you want to return an HTTP status code of "OK" `200` by default. But if the data didn't exist, you want to create it, and return an HTTP status code of "CREATED" `201`. But you still want to be able to filter and convert the data you return with a `response_model`. For those cases, you can use a `Response` parameter. ## Use a `Response` parameter You can declare a parameter of type `Response` in your *path operation function* (as you can do for cookies and headers). And then you can set the `status_code` in that *temporal* response object. ```Python hl_lines="2 11 14" {!./src/response_change_status_code/tutorial001.py!} ``` And then you can return any object you need, as you normally would (a `dict`, a database model, etc). And if you declared a `response_model`, it will still be used to filter and convert the object you returned. **FastAPI** will use that *temporal* response to extract the status code (also cookies and headers), and will put them in the final response that contains the value you returned, filtered by any `response_model`. You can also declare the `Response` parameter in dependencies, and set the status code in them. But have in mind that the last one to be set will win.