💾 Mbit to PB — Megabit to Petabyte Converter

Convert data storage units — bytes, KB, MB, GB, TB, PB, bits and binary units.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 Mbit = 1.2500e-10 PB
UnitNameValue
0.001 Mbit1.250e-13 PB
0.01 Mbit1.250e-12 PB
0.1 Mbit1.250e-11 PB
1 Mbit1.250e-10 PB
5 Mbit6.250e-10 PB
10 Mbit1.25e-09 PB
50 Mbit6.25e-09 PB
100 Mbit1.25e-08 PB
1000 Mbit1.25e-07 PB

Quick Answer

Formula: Petabyte = Megabit × 1.2500e-10

Multiply any megabit value by 1.2500e-10 to get petabyte. One megabit equals 1.2500e-10 PB.

Reverse: Megabit = Petabyte × 8e+09

Worked Examples

1 Mbit
1 Mbit × 1.2500e-10 = 1.2500e-10 PB
Single unit reference.
8 Mbit
8 Mbit × 1.2500e-10 = 1.0000e-9 PB
8 Mbit — common binary reference (8 bits = 1 byte).
64 Mbit
64 Mbit × 1.2500e-10 = 8.0000e-9 PB
64 Mbit — common power-of-2 reference.
1000 Mbit
1000 Mbit × 1.2500e-10 = 1.2500e-7 PB
1,000 Mbit — kilo-scale reference.

Megabit to Petabyte Conversion Table

Common megabit values with real-world context — factor: 1 Mbit = 1.2500e-10 PB

Megabit (Mbit)Petabyte (PB)Context
1 Mbit1.250e-10 PB125 KB
8 Mbit1.000e-09 PB1 MB
10 Mbit1.250e-09 PB1.25 MB
100 Mbit1.250e-08 PB12.5 MB
1,000 Mbit1.250e-07 PB125 MB
8,000 Mbit1.000e-06 PB1 GB
1e+04 Mbit1.250e-06 PB1.25 GB
1e+05 Mbit1.250e-05 PB12.5 GB
1e+06 Mbit0.000125 PB125 GB
8e+06 Mbit0.001 PB1 TB
1e+09 Mbit0.125 PB125 TB
8e+09 Mbit1 PB1 PB
1.000e+12 Mbit125 PB125 PB
8.000e+12 Mbit1,000 PB125 PB
1.000e+15 Mbit1.25e+05 PB125 PB

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 Mbit = 1.2500e-10 PB. Memorize this for instant estimates.

Decimal vs binary

Data storage uses both decimal (×1000) and binary (×1024) prefixes. The factor above follows the decimal (SI) standard used by storage manufacturers.

Reverse check

To verify: multiply your result by 8e+09 to recover the original Mbit value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

ISP Engineer

Provisions broadband links rated in Mbit/s for residential and business customers.

Network Engineer

Monitors interface utilization in Mbit/s on routers and switches.

Video Streamer

Checks minimum bitrate requirements — Netflix 4K requires 25 Mbit/s.

VoIP Administrator

Calculates bandwidth — a G.711 VoIP call uses about 0.064 Mbit/s per line.

Competitive Gamer

Checks upload/download in Mbit/s to assess gaming latency and throughput.

Broadcasting Engineer

Specs live video contribution feeds in Mbit/s for remote production.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Megabit and Petabyte

Megabit (Mbit)

The megabit (Mbit) equals 1,000,000 bits and is the standard unit for broadband internet speed ratings. ISPs advertise speeds in Mbps (megabits per second), not megabytes per second.

A 100 Mbps broadband connection can theoretically download 12.5 MB per second. Standard definition video streaming requires about 3 Mbps; 4K HDR streaming needs 25 Mbps.

Interesting fact: The confusion between Mbit and MB is intentional in some marketing — a '100 Mbps' connection sounds faster than '12.5 MB/s', though they're identical.

Petabyte (PB)

The petabyte (PB) equals 1,000 TB (decimal) or 2^50 bytes (binary). Petabyte-scale storage is the domain of large cloud providers, government agencies, and scientific research projects.

Facebook processes over 100 PB of data per month. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN generates about 15 PB of data per year. The human genome project required about 200 PB of data analysis.

Interesting fact: If you stored 1 PB of data on standard DVDs, the stack would be about 220 km tall. Google processes approximately 20 PB of data per day.

About Megabit to Petabyte Conversion

Converting megabit to petabyte is a common task in computing, networking, and data management. Storage manufacturers, operating systems, and network equipment often express data sizes in different units — understanding the conversion is essential for comparing specifications, planning storage capacity, and interpreting network speed versus file size relationships.

As a practical reference: 5 Mbit = 6.2500e-10 PB and 10 Mbit = 1.2500e-9 PB. For larger quantities, 100 Mbit = 1.2500e-8 PB. The reverse conversion uses the factor 8e+09, so 1 PB = 8e+09 Mbit. Note that decimal prefixes (KB=1,000, MB=1,000,000) differ from binary prefixes (KiB=1,024, MiB=1,048,576) — always check which standard your software or hardware uses.

All conversions use the internationally recognized factor of exactly 1 Mbit = 1.2500e-10 PB, calculated with IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic accurate to at least 8 significant figures.