Megabit to Megabyte

Mb

1 Mb

MB

0.125 MB

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1 Mb (Megabit) → 0.125 MB (Megabyte)

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Quick Reference Table (Megabit to Megabyte)

Megabit (Mb)Megabyte (MB)
10.125
50.625
101.25
253.125
506.25
10012.5
1,000125

About Megabit (Mb)

A megabit (Mb or Mbit) equals 1,000,000 bits (1,000 kilobits) in the SI system. It is the standard unit for expressing broadband internet speeds and Wi-Fi throughput. Most internet service providers advertise download and upload speeds in megabits per second (Mbps). A 100 Mbps connection can theoretically download 100 megabits — about 12.5 megabytes — per second. Video streaming quality is also expressed in megabits: standard HD requires roughly 5 Mbps; 4K streaming requires 15–25 Mbps.

A 50 Mbps broadband plan delivers roughly 6.25 MB/s of download speed. Netflix recommends 15 Mbps for HD and 25 Mbps for 4K streaming.

About Megabyte (MB)

A megabyte (MB) equals 1,000,000 bytes (10⁶ bytes) in the SI decimal system. It is the standard unit for file sizes in everyday computing: digital photos (2–8 MB), MP3 audio files (3–10 MB), and small software applications. Network data usage on mobile plans was once tracked in megabytes; today gigabytes are more common. A megabyte holds approximately one million characters of text — about 500 pages of an average novel. The binary equivalent, the mebibyte (MiB = 1,048,576 bytes), is used internally by operating systems and differs from the decimal MB by about 4.9%.

A typical JPEG photo from a smartphone is 3–6 MB. A 3-minute MP3 song at 128 kbps is about 2.8 MB. A Microsoft Word document for a 20-page report is roughly 1–2 MB.


Megabit – Frequently Asked Questions

Divide Mbps by 8 to get megabytes per second (MB/s). A 100 Mbps connection = 12.5 MB/s. A 1 Gbps connection = 125 MB/s. This conversion is essential when comparing advertised internet speeds (always in Mbps) to actual file download speeds (shown in MB/s by browsers and download managers).

Netflix recommends 25 Mbps for 4K Ultra HD. Disney+ and Apple TV+ recommend 25 Mbps; YouTube recommends 20 Mbps for 4K. These are per-stream figures — a household streaming two 4K sources simultaneously needs roughly 50 Mbps of reliable throughput, plus headroom for other devices.

ISP speed ratings are theoretical maximums under ideal conditions. Real-world factors include network congestion, router quality, Wi-Fi interference, the server's upload speed, and protocol overhead. Additionally, browsers and download managers report speeds in MB/s (bytes), which is 8× smaller than the Mbps figure — a 100 Mbps plan showing 11 MB/s in a browser is performing normally.

One gigabit equals 1,000 megabits (SI decimal system). Gigabit broadband (1 Gbps) = 1,000 Mbps = 125 MB/s theoretical download speed. In the binary IEC system, one gibibit = 1,024 mebibits — but for internet speeds the SI decimal values are always used.

Fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) delivers symmetric speeds of 100–10,000 Mbps with consistent performance regardless of distance from the exchange. Cable (DOCSIS 3.1) offers 100–1,200 Mbps download but typically 10–50 Mbps upload, and throughput degrades during neighborhood peak hours due to shared bandwidth. DSL (VDSL2) maxes out at 50–100 Mbps download and drops sharply beyond 500 meters from the DSLAM cabinet. In practice, most cable users see 60–80% of advertised speeds; DSL users at distance may see under 50%. Fiber is the only technology that reliably delivers its rated megabit throughput.

Megabyte – Frequently Asked Questions

A JPEG photo from a modern smartphone is typically 3–8 MB depending on resolution and compression settings. A RAW format photo from a DSLR or mirrorless camera is 20–50 MB per shot. A PNG screenshot at full HD (1920×1080) is about 1–3 MB; a compressed JPEG screenshot may be under 200 kB.

Video data usage depends heavily on quality: SD video uses roughly 700 MB per hour; HD (1080p) uses 1.5–3 GB per hour; 4K uses 7–20 GB per hour. These are byte-based measurements. In terms of bitrate: SD ≈ 1.5 Mbps, HD ≈ 5–8 Mbps, 4K ≈ 15–25 Mbps — where the "b" is bits, requiring division by 8 to convert to MB/s.

Compression algorithms like ZIP, GZIP, and ZSTD find and eliminate redundancy in data. Typical ratios vary dramatically by file type: plain text compresses to 20–30% of original size (a 10 MB log file becomes 2–3 MB); source code compresses to 25–35%; office documents (DOCX, XLSX) are already ZIP-compressed internally, so re-compressing gains little. JPEG, MP3, and H.264 video are already lossy-compressed and typically shrink by less than 5% with ZIP. A 100 MB folder of mixed files typically compresses to 40–60 MB. The key principle: compression removes statistical redundancy, so already-compressed or random data cannot be reduced further.

MB (megabyte) = 1,000,000 bytes (SI decimal). MiB (mebibyte) = 1,048,576 bytes (IEC binary). The difference is about 4.9%. Windows historically displayed storage in binary units but labelled them as "MB" — confusingly. Since Windows Vista, Microsoft has used the binary calculation consistently. macOS switched to SI decimal units in OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (2009), matching the way hard drive manufacturers measure capacity.

Approximate data consumption per hour: web browsing = 60–100 MB, social media scrolling = 100–300 MB, music streaming (Spotify standard) = 40–50 MB, video calls (Zoom standard quality) = 300–500 MB, YouTube HD = 1,500–3,000 MB. These are rough averages and vary by content, settings, and network conditions.

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