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Convert Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second

Instantly convert Kilobits per Second (Kbps) to Gigabits per Second (Gbps) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: Kbps to Gbpsmultiply by 1.0000e-6

Reference Table

Kilobits per Second (Kbps)Gigabits per Second (Gbps)
10.000001
50.000005
100.00001
250.000025
500.00005
1000.0001

How to Convert Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second

Formula

To convert Kilobits per Second (Kbps) to Gigabits per Second (Gbps): multiply by 1.0000e-6

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Kilobits per Second (Kbps).
  2. Multiply by 1.0000e-6 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Gigabits per Second (Gbps).

Conversion Factor

1 Kbps = 0.000001 Gbps

Reverse Factor

1 Gbps = 1000000 Kbps

Worked Example

Convert 25 Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second: 25 Kbps = 0.000025 Gbps

About Kilobits per Second (Kbps)

A data transfer rate equal to 1,000 bits per second (10³ bps) in the SI/networking convention, or 1,024 bps in the binary/storage convention (the SI convention dominates for transfer-rate measurements per IEEE 802 + ITU-T G.992 standards). Reference values: legacy dial-up modems V.32bis 14.4 Kbps; ISDN BRI single-channel 64 Kbps + dual-channel 128 Kbps; legacy GSM voice 9.6 Kbps (uncompressed); voice-over-IP G.711 64 Kbps + G.729 8 Kbps; SD-quality MP3 audio 96-128 Kbps; AAC audio 64-128 Kbps; FM-radio-quality streaming 64-96 Kbps. Mobile-broadband 2G/EDGE ~50-200 Kbps, 3G/UMTS ~384 Kbps - 2 Mbps. The kbps unit dominates audio-streaming codec specifications (Spotify 'Normal' 96 Kbps + 'High' 160 Kbps + 'Very High' 320 Kbps; Apple Music streaming 256 Kbps AAC + Lossless 16-bit/44.1 kHz ALAC ~1,411 Kbps; Tidal HiFi Plus FLAC ~1,411 Kbps). Common LoRaWAN long-range IoT data rates 0.3-27 Kbps.

About Gigabits per Second (Gbps)

A data transfer rate equal to 1,000,000,000 bits per second (10⁹ bps) — the working unit for high-speed networking, data centers, and modern storage interfaces. Reference values: residential gigabit fiber 1-10 Gbps (Verizon Fios 1 Gbps + 5 Gbps tiers, AT&T Fiber up to 5 Gbps, Google Fiber 2 Gbps + 8 Gbps tiers); modern Wi-Fi 6 (IEEE 802.11ax) theoretical max 9.6 Gbps, Wi-Fi 6E with 6 GHz band adds capacity; Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be, ratified 2024) theoretical max 46 Gbps; data center spine Ethernet 100/400 Gbps standard (IEEE 802.3bs + 802.3ck); USB4 supports up to 80 Gbps (USB 4 v2 2022); Thunderbolt 4 + 5 40-80 Gbps; PCIe Gen 4 ×4 lane ~16 Gbps per direction (NVMe SSD interface); PCIe Gen 5 ×4 ~32 Gbps per direction; cellular 5G mmWave peak typical 1-10 Gbps; HDMI 2.1 (FRL — Fixed Rate Link) 48 Gbps for 8K 60 Hz; DisplayPort 2.1 80 Gbps. Backbone Internet exchange peering between ISPs typically uses 100 GbE or 400 GbE links.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Kilobits per Second equals 0.000001 Gigabits per Second
  • 1 Gigabits per Second equals 1000000 Kilobits per Second
  • Kilobits per Second is a unit of data transfer rate
  • Gigabits per Second is a unit of data transfer rate
  • This conversion is commonly used in networking, internet speed testing, and bandwidth planning

Common Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second Conversions

Kilobits per Second (Kbps)Gigabits per Second (Gbps)
0.011.000000e-8
0.11.000000e-7
0.252.500000e-7
0.55.000000e-7
10.000001
20.000002
30.000003
50.000005
100.00001
150.000015
200.00002
250.000025
500.00005
750.000075
1000.0001
2500.00025
5000.0005
10000.001
50000.005
100000.01

Understanding Kilobits per Second

The Kilobits per Second (symbol: Kbps) is a unit of data transfer rate. A data transfer rate equal to 1,000 bits per second (10³ bps) in the SI/networking convention, or 1,024 bps in the binary/storage convention (the SI convention dominates for transfer-rate measurements per IEEE 802 + ITU-T G.992 standards). Reference values: legacy dial-up modems V.32bis 14.4 Kbps; ISDN BRI single-channel 64 Kbps + dual-channel 128 Kbps; legacy GSM voice 9.6 Kbps (uncompressed); voice-over-IP G.711 64 Kbps + G.729 8 Kbps; SD-quality MP3 audio 96-128 Kbps; AAC audio 64-128 Kbps; FM-radio-quality streaming 64-96 Kbps. Mobile-broadband 2G/EDGE ~50-200 Kbps, 3G/UMTS ~384 Kbps - 2 Mbps. The kbps unit dominates audio-streaming codec specifications (Spotify 'Normal' 96 Kbps + 'High' 160 Kbps + 'Very High' 320 Kbps; Apple Music streaming 256 Kbps AAC + Lossless 16-bit/44.1 kHz ALAC ~1,411 Kbps; Tidal HiFi Plus FLAC ~1,411 Kbps). Common LoRaWAN long-range IoT data rates 0.3-27 Kbps.

Kilobits per Second are commonly used in networking, internet speed testing, and bandwidth planning.

Understanding Gigabits per Second

The Gigabits per Second (symbol: Gbps) is a unit of data transfer rate. A data transfer rate equal to 1,000,000,000 bits per second (10⁹ bps) — the working unit for high-speed networking, data centers, and modern storage interfaces. Reference values: residential gigabit fiber 1-10 Gbps (Verizon Fios 1 Gbps + 5 Gbps tiers, AT&T Fiber up to 5 Gbps, Google Fiber 2 Gbps + 8 Gbps tiers); modern Wi-Fi 6 (IEEE 802.11ax) theoretical max 9.6 Gbps, Wi-Fi 6E with 6 GHz band adds capacity; Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be, ratified 2024) theoretical max 46 Gbps; data center spine Ethernet 100/400 Gbps standard (IEEE 802.3bs + 802.3ck); USB4 supports up to 80 Gbps (USB 4 v2 2022); Thunderbolt 4 + 5 40-80 Gbps; PCIe Gen 4 ×4 lane ~16 Gbps per direction (NVMe SSD interface); PCIe Gen 5 ×4 ~32 Gbps per direction; cellular 5G mmWave peak typical 1-10 Gbps; HDMI 2.1 (FRL — Fixed Rate Link) 48 Gbps for 8K 60 Hz; DisplayPort 2.1 80 Gbps. Backbone Internet exchange peering between ISPs typically uses 100 GbE or 400 GbE links.

Gigabits per Second are commonly used in networking, internet speed testing, and bandwidth planning.

Why Convert Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second?

Converting between Kilobits per Second and Gigabits per Second is a frequent requirement for engineers, scientists, and students working with data transfer rate values. Different industries and regions favour different unit systems, so having a dependable conversion tool saves time and prevents errors in technical calculations. Whether you are verifying a specification sheet, cross-checking simulation results, or preparing a report for an international audience, accurate data transfer rate conversion is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second?

A data transfer rate equal to 1,000 bits per second (10³ bps) in the SI/networking convention, or 1,024 bps in the binary/storage convention (the SI convention dominates for transfer-rate measurements per IEEE 802 + ITU-... To convert Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second, multiply by 1.0000e-6. For example, 25 Kbps equals 0.000025 Gbps.

How many Gigabits per Second are in 1 Kilobits per Second?

There are 0.000001 Gigabits per Second in 1 Kilobits per Second.

How many Kilobits per Second are in 1 Gigabits per Second?

There are 1000000 Kilobits per Second in 1 Gigabits per Second.

What is the formula for Kilobits per Second to Gigabits per Second conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 1.0000e-6. This means 1 Kbps = 0.000001 Gbps.

Is a Kilobits per Second bigger than a Gigabits per Second?

Yes. One Kilobits per Second is larger than one Gigabits per Second because 1 Kbps equals 0.000001 Gbps, which is less than 1.

When do you need to convert between Kilobits per Second and Gigabits per Second?

A data transfer rate equal to 1,000,000,000 bits per second (10⁹ bps) — the working unit for high-speed networking, data centers, and modern storage interfaces. Kilobits per Second and Gigabits per Second are both data transfer units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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