Gbps to GB/s Converter
Convert Gigabit Network Speeds to Gigabyte Transfer Rates
Formula: GB/s = Gbps ÷ 8
8 bits = 1 byte
File Transfer Time at Current Speed
Transfer Time:
Common Transfer Scenarios:
Common Network Speeds
1 Gbps
= 0.125 GB/s
Gigabit Ethernet2.5 Gbps
= 0.3125 GB/s
Multi-Gig Ethernet10 Gbps
= 1.25 GB/s
10 Gigabit Ethernet25 Gbps
= 3.125 GB/s
Data center standard40 Gbps
= 5 GB/s
High-speed backbone100 Gbps
= 12.5 GB/s
100G EthernetGbps to GB/s Reference Table
| Speed (Gbps) | GB/s | MB/s | Technology |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 Gbps | 0.0625 GB/s | 62.5 MB/s | DOCSIS 3.0 cable |
| 1 Gbps | 0.125 GB/s | 125 MB/s | Gigabit Ethernet |
| 5 Gbps | 0.625 GB/s | 625 MB/s | USB 3.0 / WiFi 6 |
| 10 Gbps | 1.25 GB/s | 1,250 MB/s | 10GbE / USB 3.1 |
| 16 Gbps | 2 GB/s | 2,000 MB/s | Fibre Channel |
| 25 Gbps | 3.125 GB/s | 3,125 MB/s | 25GbE SFP28 |
| 32 Gbps | 4 GB/s | 4,000 MB/s | PCIe 4.0 x8 |
| 40 Gbps | 5 GB/s | 5,000 MB/s | 40GbE QSFP+ |
| 56 Gbps | 7 GB/s | 7,000 MB/s | InfiniBand FDR |
| 100 Gbps | 12.5 GB/s | 12,500 MB/s | 100GbE QSFP28 |
| 200 Gbps | 25 GB/s | 25,000 MB/s | InfiniBand HDR |
| 400 Gbps | 50 GB/s | 50,000 MB/s | 400GbE QSFP-DD |
Understanding Gigabit Networks
Network Technologies
Common Gbps implementations:
- 1 Gbps: Home/office standard
- 10 Gbps: Enterprise backbone
- 25/40 Gbps: Data center ToR
- 100 Gbps: Core networking
- 400 Gbps: Internet exchange
- 800 Gbps: Next generation
Real vs Theoretical Speed
Actual throughput factors:
| Protocol overhead | ~5-10% |
| TCP/IP headers | ~3-5% |
| Ethernet framing | ~2-3% |
| Retransmissions | Variable |
| Typical efficiency | ~85-95% |
Expect 10-15% less than theoretical maximum
Fiber Optic Standards
Distance capabilities:
- SR (Short Range): 100-400m
- LR (Long Range): 10km
- ER (Extended Range): 40km
- ZR (Zero Dispersion): 80km+
Connector types: LC, SC, MPO/MTP
Wavelengths: 850nm (MM), 1310nm, 1550nm (SM)
Data Center Applications
Typical bandwidth usage:
| VM migration | 1-10 Gbps |
| Storage replication | 10-40 Gbps |
| Database cluster | 25-100 Gbps |
| AI/ML training | 100-400 Gbps |
| CDN edge node | 100+ Gbps |
Cost Considerations
Approximate pricing (2024):
- 1 Gbps: $50-100/month
- 10 Gbps: $500-1,500/month
- 100 Gbps: $5,000-15,000/month
- Transit: $0.20-2.00 per Mbps
- Peering: Port costs only
Prices vary significantly by location and provider
Frequently Asked Questions
Why divide by 8 to convert Gbps to GB/s?
Network speeds are measured in bits per second (Gbps), while file sizes use bytes (GB). Since 1 byte = 8 bits, you divide the bit rate by 8 to get the byte rate. For example, 10 Gbps ÷ 8 = 1.25 GB/s theoretical maximum transfer rate.
Why is my actual transfer speed lower than calculated?
Several factors reduce real-world speeds: protocol overhead (TCP/IP headers), error correction, network congestion, disk I/O limitations, CPU processing, and distance/latency. Typically expect 70-85% of theoretical maximum in good conditions.
What's the difference between Gbps and GBps?
Gbps (with lowercase 'b') means gigabits per second, while GBps (with uppercase 'B') means gigabytes per second. The difference is 8x: 1 GBps = 8 Gbps. Network equipment typically uses Gbps, while storage systems often use GBps.
Can I actually achieve 100 Gbps speeds?
Yes, but it requires: compatible network cards (100GbE NICs), appropriate cabling (fiber optics), capable switches/routers, optimized systems (CPU, memory, storage), and proper configuration. Most importantly, both endpoints need matching capabilities.
How much bandwidth do I need for my application?
Depends on use case: 4K streaming needs 25 Mbps, video conferencing 5-25 Mbps, large file transfers benefit from 1+ Gbps, database replication often needs 10+ Gbps, and data center interconnects typically require 100+ Gbps for optimal performance.