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Convert Bytes to Bits

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Digital

Digital Storage Converter
10 sig. figures
Formula1 B × 8 = 8 b

About Digital Storage Conversions

Digital storage units cause widespread confusion due to the historical overlap between decimal (SI) and binary (IEC) prefixes. Storage manufacturers advertise in decimal units (1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes), while operating systems historically reported in binary units (1 GiB = 1,073,741,824 bytes) — a 7.4% discrepancy that grows with larger units. A '1 TB' drive shows approximately 931 GiB in your file manager. The IEC introduced unambiguous binary prefixes (kibi-, mebi-, gibi-) in 1999, but adoption remains inconsistent. Our converter clearly distinguishes between decimal and binary prefixes, helping IT professionals, developers, and consumers accurately compare storage specifications.

Quick Conversions

BytesBits
1 B8 b
2 B16 b
5 B40 b
10 B80 b
25 B200 b
50 B400 b
100 B800 b
250 B2000 b
500 B4000 b
1000 B8000 b
Unit NameSymbolPer 1 Byte
Bitb8
ByteB1
GibibyteGiB9.31323 × 10⁻¹⁰
GigabyteGB1 × 10⁻⁹
KibibyteKiB0.000976563
KilobyteKB0.001
MebibyteMiB9.53674 × 10⁻⁷
MegabyteMB0.000001
PetabytePB1 × 10⁻¹⁵
TebibyteTiB9.09495 × 10⁻¹³
TerabyteTB1 × 10⁻¹²

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Bytes to Bits?

To convert Bytes to Bits, use the conversion where 1 Byte (B) = 8 Bits (b). For example, 1 Byte = 8 Bits.

What are common Byte to Bit conversions?

Here are common conversions: 1 Bytes = 8 Bits, 5 Bytes = 40 Bits, 10 Bytes = 80 Bits, 25 Bytes = 200 Bits, 50 Bytes = 400 Bits, 100 Bytes = 800 Bits.

When would I need to convert Bytes to Bits?

Digital storage conversions are essential when comparing storage devices advertised in decimal units (GB) with operating systems reporting in binary units (GiB), planning cloud storage needs, managing backup systems, and understanding bandwidth and transfer speed specifications.

How precise are the conversions?

All conversions use exact factors verified against NIST and ISO standards with up to 10 significant figures of precision. Results are calculated using IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, which provides approximately 15-17 significant digits. For temperature and other non-linear conversions, exact formulas are used rather than approximations.