Gigabyte to Gibibyte Converter
Convert gigabytes to gibibytes with our free online data storage converter.
Quick Answer
1 Gigabyte = 0.931323 gibibytes
Formula: Gigabyte × conversion factor = Gibibyte
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.
Gigabyte to Gibibyte Calculator
How to Use the Gigabyte to Gibibyte Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Gigabyte).
- The converted value in Gibibyte will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Data Storage category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Gigabyte to Gibibyte: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Gigabyte to Gibibyte involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Gigabyte = 0.931323 gibibytesExample Calculation:
Convert 10 gigabytes: 10 × 0.931323 = 9.31323 gibibytes
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
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View all Data Storage conversions →What is a Gigabyte and a Gibibyte?
A gigabyte (GB) is a unit of digital information storage equal to 10⁹ bytes (one billion bytes). It uses the standard SI decimal prefix 'giga-'. One gigabyte is equivalent to 1,000 megabytes (MB).
Precise definitions:
- 1 gigabyte (GB) = 1,000,000,000 bytes (exactly 10⁹)
- 1 GB = 1,000 megabytes (MB)
- 1 GB = 1,000,000 kilobytes (KB)
- 1 GB = 8,000,000,000 bits (8 billion bits)
- 1 GB = 0.001 terabytes (TB)
Relationship to binary units:
- 1 gigabyte (GB) ≈ 0.9313 gibibytes (GiB)
- 1 gibibyte (GiB) = 1,073,741,824 bytes = 2³⁰ bytes
- 1 GiB ≈ 1.074 GB (7.37% larger)
Gigabyte (GB) vs. Gibibyte (GiB): Critical Distinction
This is the source of the infamous "missing storage" confusion:
Gigabyte (GB) — Decimal prefix:
- Exactly 1,000,000,000 bytes (10⁹)
- Based on SI standard (powers of 10)
- Used by storage manufacturers (hard drives, SSDs, USB drives)
- Used for data transfer rates, internet speeds, data plans
- Marketing and advertising standard
Gibibyte (GiB) — Binary prefix:
- Exactly 1,073,741,824 bytes (2³⁰)
- Based on binary powers (powers of 2)
- Used by Windows, Linux, macOS for storage reporting
- Used in RAM specifications (though often mislabeled as "GB")
- Technical documentation standard
Why your "500 GB" drive shows as "465 GB" in Windows:
- Manufacturer's claim: 500 GB = 500,000,000,000 bytes
- Windows calculation: 500,000,000,000 ÷ 1,073,741,824 = 465.66 GiB
- Windows displays this as: "465 GB" (but actually means 465 GiB)
- Result: Appears to have "lost" 35 GB, but it's just a unit conversion
Percentage difference: GiB is 7.37% larger than GB, so the gap widens with larger capacities:
- 100 GB = 93.13 GiB (6.87 GB "missing")
- 500 GB = 465.66 GiB (34.34 GB "missing")
- 1 TB = 931.32 GiB (68.68 GB "missing")
- 2 TB = 1,862.65 GiB (137.35 GB "missing")
Gigabyte (GB) vs. Gigabit (Gb): Don't Confuse Them!
Another critical distinction:
Gigabyte (GB):
- Measures storage capacity (data at rest)
- 1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes
- Used for: file sizes, storage devices, data plans
- Symbol: GB (capital B for Byte)
Gigabit (Gb or Gbit):
- Measures data transfer speed (data in motion)
- 1 Gb = 1,000,000,000 bits
- Used for: network speeds, internet connections
- Symbol: Gb or Gbit (lowercase b for bit)
- 1 gigabyte = 8 gigabits (since 1 byte = 8 bits)
Real-world example:
- 1 Gbps (gigabit per second) internet connection can theoretically download at 125 MB/s (megabytes per second) or 0.125 GB/s
- Calculation: 1 Gbps ÷ 8 = 0.125 GB/s
- In practice: Overhead reduces this to ~100-115 MB/s actual download speed
A gibibyte (symbol: GiB) is a unit of digital information storage equal to 2³⁰ bytes, which is exactly 1,073,741,824 bytes.
Binary Prefix System
The prefix "gibi-" comes from "giga binary" and represents 2³⁰ (1,024³):
Mathematical Expression:
1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes
= 1,024³ bytes
= 1,024 × 1,024 × 1,024 bytes
= 1,073,741,824 bytes
Binary Progression:
- 1 byte = 8 bits
- 1 KiB (kibibyte) = 2¹⁰ bytes = 1,024 bytes
- 1 MiB (mebibyte) = 2²⁰ bytes = 1,024 KiB = 1,048,576 bytes
- 1 GiB (gibibyte) = 2³⁰ bytes = 1,024 MiB = 1,073,741,824 bytes
- 1 TiB (tebibyte) = 2⁴⁰ bytes = 1,024 GiB = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes
Why 1,024 (Powers of 2)?
Computers use binary (base-2) internally:
- Memory addresses organized in powers of 2 (2⁰, 2¹, 2², ..., 2³⁰, ...)
- 2¹⁰ = 1,024 ≈ 1,000 (close to decimal 1,000, leading to historical confusion)
- RAM chips manufactured in binary capacities: 1 GiB, 2 GiB, 4 GiB, 8 GiB, 16 GiB, 32 GiB
Result: Binary prefixes (KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB) match how computers actually organize memory.
GiB vs. GB (The Critical Difference)
Gibibyte (GiB) – Binary (IEC standard):
- 1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes
- Used for: RAM, Windows file sizes, Linux file systems, technical specs
Gigabyte (GB) – Decimal (SI standard):
- 1 GB = 10⁹ bytes = 1,000,000,000 bytes
- Used for: Hard drive marketing, network speeds, macOS (since 2009)
Conversion:
- 1 GiB = 1.073741824 GB (approximately 1.074 GB)
- 1 GB = 0.931322575 GiB (approximately 0.931 GiB)
- Difference: 7.37% (GiB is larger)
Example:
- "500 GB" hard drive (decimal) = 500,000,000,000 bytes
- Windows shows: 500 billion ÷ 1,073,741,824 = 465.66 GiB
- This is NOT a missing ~35 GB, just different units!
Note: The Gigabyte is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Gibibyte belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Gigabyte and Gibibyte
The prefix 'giga-' (meaning billion) was adopted as an SI prefix in 1960. Its application to the byte (gigabyte) became widespread with the increasing capacity of computer storage media like hard drives in the 1980s and 1990s.
The "Giga-" Prefix Origins (1960)
International standardization:
1960: 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM):
- Officially adopted "giga-" as the SI prefix for one billion (10⁹)
- Derived from Greek "γίγας" (gigas) meaning "giant"
- Part of the expanded SI prefix system: kilo (10³), mega (10⁶), giga (10⁹), tera (10¹²)
Scientific context before computing:
- Originally used in physics and engineering (gigahertz, gigawatt, gigajoule)
- Computing adopted SI prefixes as storage capacity grew
Early Gigabyte Storage (1980s-1990s)
When gigabytes became practical:
1985: IBM 3380 Direct Access Storage Device:
- First mainstream storage system with multi-gigabyte capacity (up to 2.52 GB per unit)
- Used by mainframe computers
- Cost: Approximately $100,000+ per unit
- $40,000-$50,000 per gigabyte
1991: IBM 0663 Corsair:
- First consumer hard drive exceeding 1 GB (1.05 GB capacity)
- 3.5-inch form factor
- Price: $2,799 (approximately $2,665 per GB)
- Revolutionary for personal computing—suddenly PCs could store hundreds of applications
1997: Hard drive prices drop below $1,000/GB:
- Typical 4 GB drive: $300-$400 ($75-$100 per GB)
- Enabled multimedia computing (video editing, game installations)
Late 1990s: CD-ROMs reach 650-700 MB:
- A single CD held 0.65-0.7 GB
- Software distribution moved from floppy disks (1.44 MB) to CDs
- Games and applications could be hundreds of megabytes
The GB vs. GiB Ambiguity Crisis (1960s-1998)
Decades of confusion:
The root problem: Computer memory uses binary addressing (powers of 2), but SI prefixes are decimal (powers of 10).
1960s-1990s: Binary interpretation becomes common:
- Computer scientists used "kilobyte" = 1,024 bytes (2¹⁰), not 1,000
- "Megabyte" = 1,048,576 bytes (2²⁰), not 1,000,000
- "Gigabyte" = 1,073,741,824 bytes (2³⁰), not 1,000,000,000
- Rationale: Memory addresses are binary, so powers of 2 made sense
1980s-1990s: Storage manufacturers use decimal:
- Hard drive makers used 1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes (exact SI definition)
- Marketing advantage: Decimal prefixes made drives appear larger
- Example: 100 billion bytes marketed as "100 GB" (decimal) showed as "93.13 GB" in Windows (binary)
Consumer confusion and lawsuits:
- "Missing storage" complaints: Consumers felt deceived when drives appeared smaller than advertised
- 2006: Western Digital lawsuit: Settled for marketing "400 GB" drives that showed as 372 GB in Windows
- Apple, Seagate, others: Similar lawsuits alleging deceptive marketing
IEC Binary Prefix Solution (1998-Present)
Official standardization to end confusion:
1998: IEC introduces binary prefixes (IEC 60027-2 standard):
- Kibibyte (KiB) = 1,024 bytes (2¹⁰)
- Mebibyte (MiB) = 1,048,576 bytes (2²⁰)
- Gibibyte (GiB) = 1,073,741,824 bytes (2³⁰)
- Tebibyte (TiB) = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (2⁴⁰)
Result: "Gigabyte" (GB) officially reserved for exactly 1 billion bytes (10⁹)
2008: ISO/IEC 80000 standard reinforces binary prefixes:
- International standard formally distinguishes GB (decimal) from GiB (binary)
Current adoption status:
- Storage manufacturers: Universally use GB (decimal)
- Operating systems: Mixed—Linux increasingly uses GiB, Windows still shows "GB" but calculates in GiB, macOS uses GB (decimal) since 10.6
- RAM specifications: Technically should use GiB, but often marketed as "GB" (e.g., "16 GB RAM" actually means 16 GiB)
Modern Era (2000s-Present)
Gigabytes become consumer standard:
2000s: Hard drives reach 100-500 GB:
- 2000: Typical drive 20-40 GB ($5-$10 per GB)
- 2005: Typical drive 160-250 GB ($0.50-$1 per GB)
- 2008: First consumer 1 TB drive (1,000 GB) from Hitachi
- Prices consistently drop following Moore's Law-like trends
2007: iPhone launched with 4-8 GB storage:
- Made gigabytes the standard for mobile devices
- Rapidly increased to 16-32-64 GB models
2010s: SSDs mainstream (128-512 GB typical):
- Solid-state drives offer speed advantages
- Initially expensive ($1-$2 per GB in 2010)
- By 2020: $0.10-$0.15 per GB for consumer SSDs
2020s: Terabytes become consumer standard, gigabytes for mobile:
- Typical laptop SSD: 256-512 GB (budget) to 1-2 TB (high-end)
- Typical desktop HDD: 1-4 TB
- Smartphones: 64-256 GB standard, flagships 512 GB-1 TB
- Cloud storage: 15 GB free (Google), 2 GB free (Dropbox), 5 GB free (iCloud)
The gibibyte's creation addresses one of computing's most persistent measurement confusions.
Early Computing: Informal Binary Usage (1950s-1980s)
The Problem: Early computer scientists needed convenient names for memory sizes based on powers of 2.
Informal Convention (1950s-1970s):
- "kilobyte" (KB) informally meant 2¹⁰ = 1,024 bytes (not 1,000)
- Seemed reasonable: 1,024 ≈ 1,000, close enough for convenience
- No official standard, just common practice
Why This Worked Initially:
- Memory sizes were small (kilobytes, megabytes)
- 2.4% error (1,024 vs. 1,000) seemed negligible
- No significant commercial ambiguity
Growing Confusion (1980s-1990s)
Megabyte Era: As storage reached megabytes (1980s), ambiguity grew:
- Hard drive manufacturers: Marketed using decimal MB (1 MB = 1,000,000 bytes) for larger-sounding capacities
- Operating systems (Windows, DOS): Used binary MB (1 MB = 1,048,576 bytes) internally
- Consumers noticed: "20 MB" drive showed as ~19 MB in system
Example:
- 100 MB drive (manufacturer decimal) = 100,000,000 bytes
- Windows (binary): 100,000,000 ÷ 1,048,576 = 95.37 MB displayed
- Missing 4.63 MB? No, just different definitions!
Gigabyte Confusion Peak (1990s-2000s)
The Crisis: By the 1990s-2000s, as gigabyte storage became standard:
- Manufacturers: 1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes (decimal, larger marketing number)
- Operating Systems: 1 GB = 1,073,741,824 bytes (binary, how systems work)
- Consumers: Increasingly confused and frustrated
Real-World Impact:
- "500 GB" hard drive shows as "465 GB" in Windows
- (~35 GB "missing" = 500 billion bytes ÷ 1,073,741,824)
- Lawsuits filed against manufacturers for "false advertising"
- Technical journalists debated which definition was "correct"
IEC Binary Prefixes (1998)
Solution: International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
IEC 60027-2 Amendment 2 (December 1998): Introduced binary prefixes to eliminate ambiguity:
Binary Prefixes (IEC standard):
- kibi- (Ki) = 2¹⁰ = 1,024
- mebi- (Mi) = 2²⁰ = 1,048,576
- gibi- (Gi) = 2³⁰ = 1,073,741,824
- tebi- (Ti) = 2⁴⁰ = 1,099,511,627,776
- pebi- (Pi) = 2⁵⁰ = 1,125,899,906,842,624
- exbi- (Ei) = 2⁶⁰ = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976
Naming Logic:
- kibi = kilo + binary
- mebi = mega + binary
- gibi = giga + binary
- tebi = tera + binary
Adoption and Standardization (2000s-Present)
Standards Bodies Endorsements:
- IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers): Adopted 2005
- ISO/IEC 80000-13:2008: International standard for quantities and units
- NIST (US National Institute of Standards and Technology): Endorsed 2008
Operating System Adoption:
Linux:
- Many distributions use GiB for file sizes and memory (
free -h,df -h) - GNOME, KDE desktop environments display GiB
- Gradually adopted from early 2000s onward
Windows:
- Internally uses binary gigabytes (GiB) but displays as "GB"
- Has not adopted GiB notation in user interface
- Shows binary values: "500 GB drive" → displayed "465 GB" (actually 465 GiB)
macOS:
- Mac OS X 10.5 and earlier: Binary gigabytes (like Windows)
- Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (2009): Switched to decimal GB (10⁹ bytes)
- "500 GB drive" now shows as "500 GB" in macOS (decimal, matching marketing)
Hard Drive Industry:
- Continues decimal GB (10⁹) for marketing (larger numbers)
- Now explicitly states on packaging: "1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes"
RAM Industry:
- Exclusively binary: 4 GiB, 8 GiB, 16 GiB, 32 GiB, 64 GiB modules
- RAM manufacturers always used binary capacities (impossible to make 10 GiB RAM chips)
Current Status (2020s)
Where GiB is Standard:
- RAM specifications (DDR4, DDR5 modules)
- Technical documentation (JEDEC standards)
- Scientific computing and data centers
- Many Linux distributions
- Programming and software development
Where GB (Ambiguous) Persists:
- Consumer hard drives/SSD marketing (decimal GB)
- Windows UI (binary values, but labeled "GB")
- Network speeds (decimal, bits per second)
- Cloud storage providers (varies: Google Drive uses decimal GB, others vary)
The Confusion Continues: Despite IEC standardization, consumer confusion remains. Many users don't know GiB exists or understand GiB vs. GB distinction.
Common Uses and Applications: gigabytes vs gibibytes
Explore the typical applications for both Gigabyte (imperial/US) and Gibibyte (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for gigabytes
Storage Device Capacity
Capacity of hard disk drives (HDDs), solid-state drives (SSDs), USB flash drives, and memory cards.
Why gigabytes are the standard unit:
- Right size scale: Most consumer storage devices are 64 GB to 2 TB (2,000 GB)
- Marketing clarity: Easy to compare (256 GB vs. 512 GB vs. 1 TB)
- Universal understanding: Consumers understand "more GB = more storage"
Labeling conventions:
- Under 1,000 GB: Listed in gigabytes (128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB)
- 1,000 GB and above: Listed in terabytes (1 TB, 2 TB, 4 TB)
- Decimal standard: All manufacturers use GB = 1 billion bytes exactly
Shopping considerations:
- Operating system overhead: Formatted capacity slightly less than advertised (file system metadata)
- Windows calculation: Shows capacity in GiB but labels as "GB" (appears 7% smaller)
- Price per GB: Compare costs (e.g., 512 GB SSD at $50 = $0.098/GB vs. 1 TB SSD at $80 = $0.080/GB)
Large File Sizes
Size of large files like high-definition movies, software applications, operating systems, and game installations.
Digital media distribution:
- Streaming services: Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime download options (2-10 GB per HD movie)
- Game digital distribution: Steam, Epic Games Store, PlayStation Store, Xbox Store (20-150 GB per game)
- Software downloads: Adobe Creative Cloud, Microsoft Office, professional apps (1-5 GB each)
File management implications:
- Download time: 50 GB game at 100 Mbps = ~67 minutes (12.5 MB/s × 4,096 seconds)
- Storage planning: Must ensure sufficient free space for installations
- Backup considerations: Large files require external drives or cloud backup plans
RAM Capacity Specifications
Measuring Random Access Memory (RAM) capacity (though gibibyte, GiB, is technically more precise and often used by OS reporting).
RAM specifications:
- Marketing: Advertised as "GB" (e.g., "16 GB DDR4 RAM")
- Technical reality: Actually measured in GiB (16 GiB = 17.18 GB)
- Module sizes: Always binary powers (4 GB, 8 GB, 16 GB, 32 GB per module)
Why binary matters for RAM:
- Memory addressing: CPUs use binary addresses (2ⁿ)
- Physical chips: Organized in binary capacities (512 Mbit, 1 Gbit, 2 Gbit chips)
- Standard modules: 8 GB module = 8 × 1,073,741,824 bytes = 8 GiB (not 8 × 1 billion bytes)
Operating system reporting:
- Windows: Shows RAM in "GB" but calculates in GiB (16,384 MB = 16 GiB shown as "16.0 GB")
- macOS: Shows RAM in GB (decimal) since OS X 10.6
- Linux: Increasingly uses GiB notation properly
Mobile Data Plans
Quantifying data usage in mobile data plans or internet bandwidth caps.
Plan structures:
- Prepaid plans: 5 GB, 10 GB, 20 GB, 40 GB monthly allotments
- Postpaid plans: Tiered (3 GB/10 GB/30 GB) or unlimited (throttled after 50-75 GB)
- Shared family plans: 20-100 GB shared across multiple lines
- Overage charges: $10-$15 per additional GB (or throttled to 128 kbps)
Tracking usage:
- Carrier apps: Real-time GB usage monitoring
- Phone settings: Built-in data usage trackers (iOS Settings → Cellular, Android Settings → Network & Internet)
- Warnings: Notifications at 75%, 90%, 100% of plan limit
International roaming:
- Expensive GB rates: $5-$20 per GB in some regions
- Roaming passes: Daily unlimited (e.g., T-Mobile $5/day, AT&T $10/day)
Cloud Storage and Backup
Cloud storage service allocations and usage.
Consumer backup workflows:
- Photo backup: Google Photos (unlimited compressed or 15 GB high-quality), iCloud Photos (5 GB free tier)
- Document sync: Dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive for cross-device access
- Full system backup: Time Machine to external drive, Windows Backup, cloud backup services (Backblaze unlimited for $70/year)
Business cloud storage:
- Google Workspace: 30 GB per user (Business Starter), 2 TB per user (Business Standard)
- Microsoft 365 Business: 1 TB OneDrive per user
- Dropbox Business: 5 TB minimum (3+ users)
Bandwidth considerations:
- Initial upload: 500 GB to cloud at 10 Mbps upload = ~5 days continuous
- Incremental backups: Only changed files, typically MB-few GB daily
When to Use gibibytes
RAM (Memory) Specifications
Primary Use Case: RAM is ALWAYS measured in binary (GiB):
Consumer RAM:
- Laptops: 4 GiB, 8 GiB, 16 GiB, 32 GiB
- Desktops: 8 GiB, 16 GiB, 32 GiB, 64 GiB, 128 GiB
- Workstations: 64 GiB, 128 GiB, 256 GiB, 512 GiB
- Servers: 256 GiB, 512 GiB, 1 TiB, 2 TiB, 4 TiB
Why GiB (not GB): RAM addressing is binary, making binary capacities the only physically possible option.
Operating System File Management
Windows:
- File sizes displayed in "GB" (actually GiB binary)
- Memory usage: Task Manager shows GiB as "GB"
- Disk space: Binary calculation, labeled "GB"
Linux:
df -h,free -h: Often display GiB explicitly- File managers (Nautilus, Dolphin): GiB for file sizes
- System monitors: GiB for RAM and swap
Precision Matters:
- System administrators use GiB for accurate capacity planning
- File size reporting needs binary precision for checksums and verification
Software Development and Databases
Memory Limits:
- 32-bit systems: Maximum 4 GiB RAM (2³² bytes, 4,294,967,296)
- 64-bit systems: Theoretical max 16 EiB (2⁶⁴ bytes, practically unlimited)
Database Configuration:
- Buffer pool size: 8 GiB, 16 GiB, 32 GiB (MySQL, PostgreSQL)
- Cache allocations: Binary sizes for efficiency
Programming:
- Memory allocation APIs: Specify bytes (often in GiB multiples)
- Performance optimization: Understanding binary vs. decimal for memory profiling
Virtualization and Containers
Virtual Machine Configuration:
- Hypervisors (VMware, VirtualBox, KVM): Memory in GiB
- Guest OS allocation: 2 GiB, 4 GiB, 8 GiB per VM
- Resource pools: Total memory in GiB across VMs
Docker/Kubernetes:
- Container memory limits: Specified in GiB or MiB
- Example:
memory: 2Giin Kubernetes (2 GiB)
Data Center and Enterprise Storage
Capacity Planning:
- Server RAM upgrades: Per-socket GiB calculations
- Storage arrays: TiB (binary) for actual usable capacity after RAID/formatting
- Backup sizing: Binary measurements for accurate space requirements
Network Infrastructure:
- SAN (Storage Area Network): Binary capacity reporting
- NAS (Network Attached Storage): Often binary (TiB) for actual space
Additional Unit Information
About Gigabyte (GB)
How many bytes are in a gigabyte (GB)?
There are exactly 1,000,000,000 (one billion or 10⁹) bytes in 1 gigabyte (GB). This is the official SI definition adopted by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) in 1998. Storage manufacturers use this decimal definition universally, which is why a "500 GB" hard drive contains exactly 500 billion bytes.
How many megabytes (MB) are in a gigabyte (GB)?
There are 1,000 megabytes (MB) in 1 gigabyte (GB), following the SI decimal standard. To convert GB to MB, multiply by 1,000. To convert MB to GB, divide by 1,000. For example: 5 GB = 5,000 MB, and 2,500 MB = 2.5 GB.
What is the difference between a gigabyte (GB) and a gibibyte (GiB)?
A gigabyte (GB) uses the decimal prefix 'giga-' and equals 10⁹ (1,000,000,000) bytes. A gibibyte (GiB) uses the binary prefix 'gibi-' and equals 2³⁰ (1,073,741,824) bytes. A gibibyte is approximately 7.37% larger than a gigabyte (1 GiB ≈ 1.074 GB). Storage manufacturers use GB (decimal), while Windows calculates storage in GiB but mislabels it as "GB," creating the infamous "missing storage" confusion where a 500 GB drive shows as 465 GB (actually 465 GiB) in Windows.
What is the difference between a gigabyte (GB) and a gigabit (Gb)?
A gigabyte (GB) measures data storage capacity in bytes, while a gigabit (Gb) measures data in bits, commonly used for data transfer rates (e.g., Gbps). Since 1 byte = 8 bits, 1 gigabyte (GB) = 8 gigabits (Gb). File sizes are measured in GB, while internet connection speeds are measured in Gbps. A 1 Gbps connection downloads at approximately 125 MB/s (megabytes per second) or 0.125 GB/s—NOT 1 GB/s!
How much storage is 1 GB?
1 GB can store approximately:
- 200-300 smartphone photos (3-5 MB each)
- 250 MP3 songs (4-minute songs at 128 kbps)
- 1,000 text documents (Word files with some images)
- 40-60 minutes of 1080p video (compressed)
- 12-15 minutes of 4K video (compressed)
- 500,000 plain text files (2 KB each)
For reference, a typical 1080p movie is 4-5 GB, a modern smartphone photo is 3-5 MB (so 1 GB holds about 250 photos), and a large PC game is 50-150 GB.
Why does my 500 GB hard drive show as 465 GB?
This is the infamous "missing storage" phenomenon caused by two different unit systems:
What's happening:
- Manufacturer's claim: 500 GB = 500,000,000,000 bytes (decimal, using 10⁹)
- Windows calculation: Divides by 1,073,741,824 (binary GiB, using 2³⁰) = 465.66 GiB
- Windows display: Shows "465 GB" (but actually means 465 GiB, mislabeled)
You didn't lose 35 GB—it's just unit conversion. Your drive contains exactly 500 billion bytes as advertised. The 7.37% difference is because gibibytes (used by Windows) are larger than gigabytes (used by manufacturers). Additionally, ~1-2% is used for file system overhead after formatting.
macOS handles this better: Since OS X 10.6 (2009), macOS displays storage in decimal GB matching manufacturers, so a 500 GB drive correctly shows as "500 GB."
How long does it take to download 1 GB?
Download time depends on your internet connection speed:
Common internet speeds:
- 10 Mbps: 1 GB = ~13 minutes (1.25 MB/s)
- 50 Mbps: 1 GB = ~2.7 minutes (6.25 MB/s)
- 100 Mbps: 1 GB = ~80 seconds (12.5 MB/s)
- 1 Gbps (gigabit fiber): 1 GB = ~8 seconds (125 MB/s)
Calculation: Divide Mbps by 8 to get MB/s (because 1 byte = 8 bits), then divide 1,000 MB (1 GB) by MB/s to get seconds.
Real-world note: Actual speeds are typically 70-90% of advertised due to network overhead, server limitations, and congestion.
How much does 1 GB of storage cost?
Storage costs have dropped dramatically over decades:
Historical costs per GB:
- 1985 (IBM 3380): ~$40,000-$50,000 per GB
- 1991 (IBM Corsair): ~$2,665 per GB
- 2000: ~$5-$10 per GB (consumer HDDs)
- 2010: ~$0.10-$0.20 per GB (HDDs), $1-$2 per GB (SSDs)
- 2020: ~$0.02-$0.03 per GB (HDDs), $0.10-$0.15 per GB (SSDs)
- 2024: ~$0.015-$0.02 per GB (HDDs), $0.06-$0.10 per GB (SSDs)
Modern examples (2024):
- 1 TB HDD: $40-$50 → $0.04-$0.05 per GB
- 1 TB SSD: $70-$90 → $0.07-$0.09 per GB
- Cloud storage (Google One 100 GB): $1.99/month = $23.88/year → $0.24 per GB per year
Storage costs continue declining ~30-40% annually for SSDs, more slowly (~10-20%) for HDDs.
Is 128 GB enough storage?
128 GB is the minimum usable storage for modern devices, but adequacy depends on usage:
Sufficient for:
- Chromebooks/lightweight laptops: Web-based work, streaming (not downloading) media
- Budget smartphones: Light app users, cloud photo storage enabled
- Tablet for consumption: Reading, streaming, casual gaming
Inadequate for:
- Gaming PCs: Modern games are 50-150 GB each—only 1-2 games fit
- Content creators: Video editing, photography (RAW files), graphic design
- Heavy app users: Many large apps, offline media libraries
- Professional work: Large software suites (Adobe, CAD, development environments)
Recommendation: 256 GB minimum for comfortable general use, 512 GB-1 TB for gaming/content creation, 2 TB+ for professional media work.
How many gigabytes per month for internet usage?
Average household internet usage varies widely:
Light users (10-50 GB/month):
- Email and web browsing
- Occasional video streaming (few hours/week)
- Social media browsing
- Online shopping
Moderate users (50-250 GB/month):
- Regular HD video streaming (1-3 hours/day)
- Video calls and remote work
- Music streaming
- Software/app downloads
Heavy users (250-500 GB/month):
- Multiple household members streaming simultaneously
- 4K video streaming
- Online gaming (downloads, updates)
- Large file downloads
Extreme users (500+ GB-1 TB+/month):
- 4K streaming on multiple devices all day
- Large game downloads (50-150 GB games regularly)
- Video uploading (YouTubers, streamers)
- Cloud backup of large video/photo libraries
Most ISPs: Enforce 1-1.2 TB (1,000-1,200 GB) monthly caps, charging $10-$50 for overage blocks or unlimited upgrades.
What uses the most gigabytes on my phone?
Top storage consumers on smartphones:
-
Photos and videos (typically 30-60% of storage):
- Camera photos: 3-5 MB each
- 4K videos: ~400 MB per minute
- Screenshots: 1-3 MB each
-
Apps and app data (typically 20-40%):
- Social media apps: 500 MB-2 GB each (with cached content)
- Games: 1-5 GB each (large games like Genshin Impact: 15+ GB)
- Streaming apps: 200-500 MB plus cached content
-
System and OS (typically 10-20%):
- iOS: ~8-12 GB
- Android: ~8-15 GB depending on manufacturer
-
Messages and attachments (typically 5-15%):
- iMessage/WhatsApp media accumulates over time
- Video messages especially storage-heavy
-
Downloaded music/podcasts (if applicable): 5-20%
Storage management tips:
- Enable cloud photo backup and delete local copies
- Clear app caches regularly
- Delete old message threads with media
- Offload unused apps (iOS feature preserves data, removes app)
About Gibibyte (GiB)
How many bytes are in a gibibyte?
Exactly 2³⁰ bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes
Breakdown:
- 1 GiB = 1,024 MiB (mebibytes)
- 1 MiB = 1,024 KiB (kibibytes)
- 1 KiB = 1,024 bytes
- 1 GiB = 1,024 × 1,024 × 1,024 bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes
How many mebibytes (MiB) are in a gibibyte (GiB)?
Exactly 1,024 MiB in 1 GiB
Calculation:
- 1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes
- 1 MiB = 2²⁰ bytes
- 2³⁰ ÷ 2²⁰ = 2¹⁰ = 1,024
Binary progression:
- 1 KiB = 1,024 bytes
- 1 MiB = 1,024 KiB
- 1 GiB = 1,024 MiB
- 1 TiB = 1,024 GiB
What is the difference between a gibibyte (GiB) and a gigabyte (GB)?
Gibibyte (GiB) – Binary (IEC standard):
- 1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes
- Used for RAM, Windows file sizes, technical specs
Gigabyte (GB) – Decimal (SI standard):
- 1 GB = 10⁹ bytes = 1,000,000,000 bytes
- Used for hard drive marketing, network speeds
Difference:
- 1 GiB ≈ 1.074 GB (GiB is 7.37% larger)
- 1 GB ≈ 0.931 GiB
When to use which:
- GiB: RAM, Windows/Linux file systems, VM memory, technical precision
- GB: Hard drive/SSD marketing, macOS (post-2009), network speeds
Why does my "1 TB" hard drive show as 931 GB in Windows?
This is normal and NOT a defect!
Explanation:
- Manufacturer advertises: 1 TB (decimal) = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes
- Windows calculates: 1 trillion bytes ÷ 1,073,741,824 (GiB) = 931.32 GiB
- Windows displays: "931 GB" (mislabeled; actually 931 GiB)
You're not missing storage:
- You have exactly 1 trillion bytes as advertised
- Windows uses binary (GiB) but labels it "GB"
- The ~7% "difference" is purely definitional (GiB vs. GB)
Additional reductions:
- File system overhead (formatting): 1-3% (NTFS, ext4, APFS)
- Final usable space: ~900-920 GiB typically
Why is RAM always in powers of 2 (4 GiB, 8 GiB, 16 GiB)?
Binary addressing makes non-binary RAM impossible:
Technical Reason:
- RAM uses binary address lines: 2⁰, 2¹, 2², ..., 2²⁹, 2³⁰
- Each address line doubles capacity
- 8 GiB RAM: Uses 33 address lines (2³³ bytes, 8 × 2³⁰)
- 16 GiB RAM: Uses 34 address lines (2³⁴ bytes, 16 × 2³⁰)
Cannot manufacture "10 GB" RAM:
- 10 billion bytes is not a power of 2
- Memory controllers can't address non-binary capacities
- Physically impossible with current technology
Result: All RAM comes in binary sizes (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 GiB), never decimal (10, 20, 50 GB).
Should I use GiB or GB when talking about RAM?
Use GiB (gibibyte) for RAM – it's technically correct:
RAM is inherently binary:
- 16 GiB RAM = 17,179,869,184 bytes (exactly)
- Saying "16 GB" is technically ambiguous (16 billion bytes? No.)
- GiB is precise and unambiguous
However, in practice:
- Consumer market says "16 GB RAM" (colloquially accepted, though imprecise)
- Technical documentation: Should use "16 GiB"
- RAM manufacturers: Often use "16 GB" in marketing, mean 16 GiB
Best practice:
- Technical contexts: Use GiB (e.g., "Server with 128 GiB RAM")
- Casual conversation: "GB" is understood to mean GiB for RAM (context makes it clear)
Does macOS use GiB or GB?
macOS uses decimal GB (10⁹ bytes) since Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard (2009):
Before 10.6: Binary gigabytes (like Windows)
- "500 GB" drive showed as "465 GB" (binary, actually GiB)
10.6 Snow Leopard and later: Decimal gigabytes (10⁹)
- "500 GB" drive now shows as "500 GB" (decimal, matches marketing)
Result:
- macOS file sizes use decimal GB (1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes)
- Matches hard drive marketing claims
- Reduces consumer confusion (but differs from Windows)
Windows vs. macOS same file:
- 1,073,741,824 bytes (1 GiB exactly)
- Windows: Shows "1.00 GB" (actually 1 GiB, mislabeled)
- macOS: Shows "1.07 GB" (decimal GB, accurate)
How do I convert between GiB and TiB?
1 TiB (tebibyte) = 1,024 GiB
Formula:
- TiB = GiB ÷ 1,024
- GiB = TiB × 1,024
Examples:
- 512 GiB = 512 ÷ 1,024 = 0.5 TiB
- 1,024 GiB = 1 TiB (exactly)
- 2,048 GiB = 2 TiB
- 0.25 TiB = 0.25 × 1,024 = 256 GiB
Binary Progression:
- 1 KiB = 1,024 bytes
- 1 MiB = 1,024 KiB
- 1 GiB = 1,024 MiB
- 1 TiB = 1,024 GiB
- 1 PiB = 1,024 TiB
Why do hard drive manufacturers use decimal GB instead of binary GiB?
Marketing and Historical Reasons:
Larger Numbers Sell Better:
- 1 TB (decimal) = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes
- 1 TiB (binary) = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes
- Decimal TB is ~9% smaller, but consumers see "1 TB" as bigger than "931 GiB"
SI Convention:
- Gigabyte (GB) with decimal definition follows SI prefix system (giga = 10⁹)
- Scientifically consistent with kilograms, kilometers, gigawatts
Industry Standardization:
- Hard drive industry standardized on decimal GB in the 1980s-1990s
- Changing now would be disruptive and expensive
Legal Requirement:
- Manufacturers must now explicitly state: "1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes" on packaging
- This resolves false advertising concerns
Conversion Table: Gigabyte to Gibibyte
| Gigabyte (GB) | Gibibyte (GiB) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0.466 |
| 1 | 0.931 |
| 1.5 | 1.397 |
| 2 | 1.863 |
| 5 | 4.657 |
| 10 | 9.313 |
| 25 | 23.283 |
| 50 | 46.566 |
| 100 | 93.132 |
| 250 | 232.831 |
| 500 | 465.661 |
| 1,000 | 931.323 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Gigabyte to Gibibyte?
To convert Gigabyte to Gibibyte, enter the value in Gigabyte in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our data storage converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Gigabyte to Gibibyte?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Gigabyte and Gibibyte. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Gibibyte back to Gigabyte?
Yes! You can easily convert Gibibyte back to Gigabyte by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Gibibyte to Gigabyte converter page. You can also explore other data storage conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Gigabyte and Gibibyte?
Gigabyte and Gibibyte are both standard units used in data storage measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our data storage converter for more conversion options.
For more data storage conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
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All Data Storage Conversions
Other Data Storage Units and Conversions
Explore other data storage units and their conversion options:
- Bit (b) • Gigabyte to Bit
- Byte (B) • Gigabyte to Byte
- Kilobit (kb) • Gigabyte to Kilobit
- Kilobyte (KB) • Gigabyte to Kilobyte
- Megabit (Mb) • Gigabyte to Megabit
- Megabyte (MB) • Gigabyte to Megabyte
- Gigabit (Gb) • Gigabyte to Gigabit
- Terabit (Tb) • Gigabyte to Terabit
- Terabyte (TB) • Gigabyte to Terabyte
- Petabit (Pb) • Gigabyte to Petabit
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
International Electrotechnical Commission — Binary prefixes for digital storage (KiB, MiB, GiB)
International Organization for Standardization — International standards for quantities and units
Last verified: December 3, 2025