Formula: GB = TB × 1024

Common TB to GB Conversions

0.5 TB

= 512 GB

Entry-level SSD

1 TB

= 1,024 GB

Standard laptop drive

2 TB

= 2,048 GB

Gaming console storage

4 TB

= 4,096 GB

Desktop HDD

8 TB

= 8,192 GB

NAS drive

16 TB

= 16,384 GB

Enterprise storage

Storage Allocation Breakdown

1 TB = 1024 GB Total Capacity
~200 GB OS & Programs
~300 GB Documents & Work
~350 GB Media & Photos
~174 GB Free Space

Typical 1TB drive usage distribution

TB to GB Reference Table

Terabytes (TB) Gigabytes (Binary) Gigabytes (Decimal) Typical Use Case
0.25 TB 256 GB 250 GB Budget laptop SSD
0.5 TB 512 GB 500 GB Mid-range SSD
1 TB 1,024 GB 1,000 GB Standard desktop drive
2 TB 2,048 GB 2,000 GB Gaming PC storage
3 TB 3,072 GB 3,000 GB Media server drive
5 TB 5,120 GB 5,000 GB Backup drive
10 TB 10,240 GB 10,000 GB Home NAS storage
12 TB 12,288 GB 12,000 GB Surveillance system
20 TB 20,480 GB 20,000 GB Small business server
100 TB 102,400 GB 100,000 GB Enterprise storage array

Understanding TB to GB Conversion

Storage Device Capacities

Common drive sizes in the market:

  • SSDs: 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB, 2 TB
  • HDDs: 1 TB, 2 TB, 4 TB, 8 TB+
  • NVMe: 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB, 2 TB
  • External: 1 TB, 2 TB, 5 TB, 10 TB
  • Enterprise: 10 TB, 16 TB, 20 TB+

Actual usable space is typically 5-10% less than advertised.

What Fits in Each TB?

250,000 photos @ 4MB each
250 HD movies @ 4GB each
500 hours 1080p @ 2GB/hour
65 hours 4K video @ 15GB/hour
200,000 songs @ 5MB each
20 AAA games @ 50GB each

RAID Configurations

How TB drives combine in RAID:

  • RAID 0: 2×1TB = 2TB (2048 GB) fast
  • RAID 1: 2×1TB = 1TB (1024 GB) mirrored
  • RAID 5: 3×1TB = 2TB (2048 GB) + parity
  • RAID 6: 4×1TB = 2TB (2048 GB) + 2× parity
  • RAID 10: 4×1TB = 2TB (2048 GB) fast+safe

Cloud Storage Tiers

Major cloud providers in GB:

  • Google One: 100 GB, 200 GB, 2 TB
  • iCloud+: 50 GB, 200 GB, 2 TB
  • OneDrive: 100 GB, 1 TB, 6 TB family
  • Dropbox: 2 TB, 3 TB, unlimited*
  • AWS S3: Pay per GB used

Most plans show TB but bill in GB increments.

Performance by Size

How capacity affects speed:

256 GB SSD ~500 MB/s
512 GB SSD ~550 MB/s
1 TB SSD ~560 MB/s
2 TB SSD ~560 MB/s
1 TB NVMe ~3500 MB/s
2 TB NVMe ~7000 MB/s

Larger SSDs often perform better due to more NAND channels.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my 1TB drive show as 931 GB in Windows?

Drive manufacturers use decimal measurements (1 TB = 1000 GB), while Windows uses binary (1 TB = 1024 GB). A "1TB" drive has 1,000,000,000,000 bytes, which equals approximately 931 GB in binary. This is normal and not a defect.

How many GB should I leave free on a 1TB drive?

For SSDs, keep 10-15% free (100-150 GB on a 1TB drive) for optimal performance and longevity. HDDs can run with less free space (5-10%), but performance may degrade when nearly full. Operating systems also need free space for temporary files and virtual memory.

Is 1TB enough storage in 2024?

For most users, 1TB (1024 GB) is sufficient for OS, applications, documents, and moderate media storage. Gamers might need 2TB+ due to modern games being 50-150 GB each. Content creators working with 4K video should consider 4TB+ for active projects.

Should I partition a multi-TB drive?

Partitioning can help organize data (e.g., 256 GB for OS, rest for data) and make backups easier. However, modern file systems handle large volumes well, so partitioning is optional. For drives over 2TB, ensure your system supports GPT partition tables.

How long does it take to fill 1TB?

At typical internet speeds: 100 Mbps = ~27 hours, 1 Gbps = ~2.7 hours. For backup: USB 3.0 = ~30 minutes, USB 2.0 = ~8 hours. Daily usage varies greatly - light users might never fill 1TB, while 4K video creators can fill it in weeks.