How to Convert Kilobits to Exabits
To convert a data storage measurement from kilobits to exabits, divide the value by the conversion factor. Since one kilobit is equal to 2-50 exabits, you can use this formula:
The data storage in exabits is equal to the kilobits divided by 250.
Using the formula: exabits = kilobits ÷ 250
exabits = 1,024 kb ÷ 250 = 9.0949E-13 Eb
Therefore, 1,024 kilobits equals 9.0949E-13 exabits.
How Many Exabits Are in a Kilobit?
There are 2-50 exabits in one kilobit.
What Is a Kilobit?
The kilobit (symbol: kb) is a unit of digital information equal to 1,024 bits in the binary system, or 1,000 bits in the decimal (SI) system. In computing, the binary definition (1,024 bits) is most commonly used, while the decimal definition is more common in telecommunications. The kilobit is most frequently encountered in the context of data transfer rates. Early dial-up modems operated at speeds measured in kilobits per second (kbps), with common speeds of 14.4, 28.8, and 56 kbps. While modern broadband speeds are measured in megabits or gigabits per second, kilobits remain relevant for low-bandwidth applications such as voice calls (typically 8–64 kbps) and IoT sensors. The IEC standard defines the kibibit (Kib) as exactly 1,024 bits to distinguish from the SI kilobit of 1,000 bits. However, in common practice, "kilobit" often refers to 1,024 bits in computing contexts, which is the convention used here. In networking, the kilobit per second (kbps) is used to describe the throughput of serial connections, Bluetooth Low Energy links, and other low-bandwidth communication channels.
One kilobit is equal to:
- 1,024 bits (b)
- 128 bytes (B)
- 256 nibbles
- 0.125 kilobytes (kB)
- 1/1,024 megabits (Mb)
What Is a Exabit?
The exabit (symbol: Eb) is a unit of digital information equal to 260 bits (approximately 1.153 quintillion bits) in the binary system, or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bits in the decimal system. Exabits represent some of the largest quantities of data discussed in information technology. Global annual internet traffic is measured in exabits. Annual global IP traffic has surpassed thousands of exabits, driven by video streaming, social media, cloud services, and the expanding Internet of Things (IoT). The total amount of data stored worldwide is estimated to be in the tens of thousands of exabits (or equivalently, tens of zettabytes). This "global datasphere" includes everything from enterprise data centers to consumer devices and is projected to continue growing exponentially. Exabit-scale data is relevant in discussions of big data, artificial intelligence training datasets, and the storage requirements of major cloud service providers. A single exabit equals about 125 petabytes, or enough capacity to store tens of millions of hours of HD video.
One exabit is equal to:
- 260 bits (≈ 1.153 quintillion bits)
- 1,024 petabits (Pb)
- 1,048,576 terabits (Tb)
- 0.125 exabytes (EB)
- 128 petabytes (PB)
Understanding Data Storage Units
Data storage units measure the amount of digital information that can be stored, transmitted, or processed. The fundamental unit is the bit (binary digit), which can hold a value of 0 or 1. All digital information, from text documents to 4K videos, is ultimately represented as sequences of bits.
Data storage units are organized in two main hierarchies: bits (b, kb, Mb, Gb, Tb, Pb, Eb) and bytes (B, kB, MB, GB, TB, PB, EB). The relationship between them is that 1 byte = 8 bits. Bits are typically used for data transfer rates (internet speed), while bytes are used for storage capacity (file sizes, drive capacity).
Binary vs. Decimal Prefixes
There are two conventions for data storage prefixes, which can cause confusion:
- Binary (base-2): Each prefix step is a factor of 1,024 (210). So 1 kB = 1,024 B, 1 MB = 1,024 kB, etc. This is used by operating systems and in most computing contexts. This converter uses the binary convention.
- Decimal (base-10): Each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 kB = 1,000 B, 1 MB = 1,000 kB, etc. This is used by storage device manufacturers and in telecommunications.
To avoid confusion, the IEC introduced binary prefixes: kibibyte (KiB = 1,024 B), mebibyte (MiB = 1,024 KiB), gibibyte (GiB = 1,024 MiB), etc. However, these names are not widely used in everyday language.
Common Data Sizes in Perspective
- 1 Bit: A single binary digit (0 or 1)
- 1 Byte (8 bits): One text character (ASCII)
- 1 Kilobyte (1,024 bytes): A short paragraph of text
- 1 Megabyte (1,024 kB): A compressed photo or one minute of MP3 audio
- 1 Gigabyte (1,024 MB): About 250 MP3 songs or a short HD video
- 1 Terabyte (1,024 GB): About 250,000 photos or 500 hours of HD video
- 1 Petabyte (1,024 TB): About 1,000 consumer hard drives
- 1 Exabyte (1,024 PB): Roughly 11 million hours of 4K video
Data Transfer Rates vs. Storage
An important distinction exists between data transfer rates and storage capacity:
- Transfer rates use bits per second: kbps, Mbps, Gbps (note lowercase 'b')
- Storage capacity uses bytes: kB, MB, GB, TB (note uppercase 'B')
To convert between them, divide the bit rate by 8 to get the byte rate. For example, a 100 Mbps internet connection can transfer at most 12.5 MB per second (100 / 8 = 12.5).
Tips for Data Storage Conversions
- To convert between adjacent byte units (kB → MB → GB → TB → PB → EB), divide by 1,024 to go up or multiply by 1,024 to go down. The same applies to bit units (kb → Mb → Gb → Tb → Pb → Eb).
- To convert between bits and bytes at the same prefix level, divide bits by 8 to get bytes, or multiply bytes by 8 to get bits. For example: 100 Mb = 12.5 MB.
- When comparing internet speed (in Mbps) with file size (in MB), divide the speed by 8 to estimate download time. A 100 Mbps connection downloads at about 12.5 MB/s, so a 1 GB file takes about 80 seconds.
- Storage manufacturers use decimal (1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes) while operating systems use binary (1 GB = 1,073,741,824 bytes). This is why a "500 GB" drive shows as about 465 GB in your OS.
- A nibble is exactly 4 bits (half a byte) and represents one hexadecimal digit. Two nibbles make one byte.
- Memory (RAM) sizes always use binary: 4 GB, 8 GB, 16 GB, 32 GB. These are exact powers of 2 in bytes.
- When estimating storage needs: text files are measured in kB, photos and songs in MB, movies and games in GB, hard drives in TB, and data centers in PB or EB.
Kilobits to Exabits Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from kilobits to exabits, using the binary convention (1 kB = 1,024 B).
| Kilobits | Exabits (Eb) |
|---|---|
| 1.0000E+15 kb | 0.888178 |
| 2.0000E+15 kb | 1.77636 |
| 3.0000E+15 kb | 2.66454 |
| 4.0000E+15 kb | 3.55271 |
| 5.0000E+15 kb | 4.44089 |
| 6.0000E+15 kb | 5.32907 |
| 7.0000E+15 kb | 6.21725 |
| 8.0000E+15 kb | 7.10543 |
| 9.0000E+15 kb | 7.99361 |
| 1.0000E+16 kb | 8.88178 |
| 2.0000E+16 kb | 17.7636 |
| 3.0000E+16 kb | 26.6454 |
| 4.0000E+16 kb | 35.5271 |
| 5.0000E+16 kb | 44.4089 |
| 6.0000E+16 kb | 53.2907 |
| 7.0000E+16 kb | 62.1725 |
| 8.0000E+16 kb | 71.0543 |
| 9.0000E+16 kb | 79.9361 |
| 1.0000E+17 kb | 88.8178 |
| 2.0000E+17 kb | 177.636 |
| 3.0000E+17 kb | 266.454 |
| 4.0000E+17 kb | 355.271 |
| 5.0000E+17 kb | 444.089 |
| 6.0000E+17 kb | 532.907 |
| 7.0000E+17 kb | 621.725 |
| 8.0000E+17 kb | 710.543 |
| 9.0000E+17 kb | 799.361 |
| 1.0000E+18 kb | 888.178 |