How To Convert Gigabit to Exabyte
Formula: 1 Gigabit = 0.000000000125 Exabyte
Example: Convert 64 Gigabit to Exabyte.
64 × 0.000000000125 = 0.000000008 EB
To do it by hand, first remember that a gigabit is a number of bits, while an exabyte is a number of bytes. Since 8 bits = 1 byte, you must divide by 8 when moving from bits to bytes. Then you scale from gigabytes up to exabytes using decimal prefixes.
This is why the number becomes very small. Exabytes are huge, and gigabits are commonly used for network speeds.
Quick Answer
1 Gigabit (Gbit) = 0.000000000125 Exabyte (EB)
- 10 Gbit = 0.00000000125 EB
- 500 Gbit = 0.0000000625 EB
- 10,000 Gbit = 0.00000125 EB
Conversion Formula
EB = Gbit × 0.000000000125
Recommended (decimal SI standard):
EB = (Gbit × 1,000,000,000 bits) ÷ (8 × 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes)
This formula works because:
- 1 Gbit = 1,000,000,000 bits
- 8 bits = 1 byte
- 1 EB = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes
So you convert gigabits to bits, change bits to bytes by dividing by 8, then convert bytes to exabytes by dividing by 1,000,000,000,000,000,000.
- Take your value in Gbit
- Multiply by 0.000000000125
- The result is in EB
Gigabit
A gigabit is a digital data unit equal to 1,000,000,000 bits. The symbol is Gbit.
It comes from the SI prefix giga, meaning 109. Gigabits became common as network and telecom speeds grew and needed bigger, clearer units.
- Internet plans and speed tests, like 1 Gbit/s fiber
- Network switches and routers, port capacity in Gbit/s
- Data center uplinks and backbone connections
- Streaming and download throughput measurements
- Video encoding and live broadcast bitrates
Exabyte
An exabyte is a digital storage unit equal to 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes. The symbol is EB.
It comes from the SI prefix exa, meaning 1018. Exabytes are used when talking about massive storage, big data, and large-scale cloud systems.
- Cloud storage at company or platform level
- Big data warehouses and long-term archives
- Large backup systems across many servers
- Global internet traffic and analytics reporting
- Scientific datasets, such as climate or astronomy archives
Is this Conversion of Gigabit To Exabyte Accurate?
Yes. We base this conversion on the standard decimal SI definitions used across networking and data storage math. We use 1 Gbit = 109 bits, 8 bits = 1 byte, and 1 EB = 1018 bytes. These are the same core definitions used in engineering references and everyday technical work, so the result is reliable for planning, comparison, and reporting.
If you want to understand standards in more detail, read our notes on definitions and rounding at accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Gigabits are often used for speed, while exabytes are used for very large storage. Converting helps you compare network transfer capacity with long-term storage size.
- Fiber link capacity: A backbone link carrying 10,000 Gbit of data over a period equals 0.00000125 EB of data moved.
- Data center burst traffic: If a service transfers 500 Gbit during a peak window, that is 0.0000000625 EB of total data.
- Upload session totals: A media team sends 75 Gbit of footage to the cloud, which equals 0.000000009375 EB.
- Weekly analytics export: An export job produces 250 Gbit of compressed logs, which is 0.00000003125 EB.
- Large software distribution: A release pushes 2,000 Gbit through a CDN in a short time, equal to 0.00000025 EB.
- Live streaming event: Total delivered data of 1,000 Gbit equals 0.000000125 EB.
- Company WAN transfer: A branch network moves 50 Gbit of backups overnight, equal to 0.00000000625 EB.
Quick Tips
- Remember the key number, 1 Gbit = 0.000000000125 EB.
- Fast mental method, EB = Gbit ÷ 8,000,000,000.
- If you see GB (gigabyte), do not confuse it with Gbit. 1 byte = 8 bits.
- Exabytes are huge, so most Gbit values turn into a very small EB decimal.
- For cleaner reporting, keep enough decimal places so you do not round to zero too early.
- Check whether a tool uses decimal (SI) or binary (IEC) units when comparing results.