Mbps to GB per Month Converter
Estimate monthly gigabytes from a megabits-per-second rate, with days, active hours, utilisation and data-cap comparison.
Monthly Data Inputs
Monthly Data Result
Based on a 30-day month, full-day use and 100% utilisation.
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Monthly Data Is About Amount, Not Just Speed
A connection speed can look harmless until it runs for weeks. One Mbps running continuously for 30 days moves about 324 GB in decimal units. Ten Mbps running continuously moves about 3.24 TB. That is why a monthly view is useful for mobile broadband, site routers, camera systems, cloud backup, telemetry, server replication and any process charged against a monthly allowance.
The calculator does not assume every service runs flat out all month. Use active hours for scheduled work, then use utilisation for the average share of that active time. A camera may be near-continuous. A backup may run every night. A home connection may move traffic mainly in the evening. A fair monthly estimate needs that pattern.
Formula Method
bits per month = Mbps x 1,000,000 x days x active hours per day x 3600 x utilisation percent / 100
decimal GB per month = bits per month / 8 / 1,000,000,000
binary GiB per month = bits per month / 8 / 1,073,741,824
30-day full-use decimal shortcut = Mbps x 324
Days matter. February, a 30-day billing month and a 31-day calendar month are not identical. The average calendar month option uses 365.25 divided by 12. The data cap comparison is a planning aid only; providers can measure allowances by their own billing day, traffic class, fair-use policy, roaming status or account rules.
Monthly Planning Cards
SIM Router
Use the cap field to see whether a site router or backup line could exceed its monthly plan when left active.
Camera Retention
Multiply monthly movement by retention copies if cloud storage keeps original, proxy and exported clips.
Cloud Sync
Scheduled jobs can be modelled with active hours, while utilisation reflects pauses, checksums and server limits.
Mbps To GB/month Conversion Table
| Mbps | GB per 30-day month at full use | Cap planning note |
|---|---|---|
| 0.25 Mbps | 81 GB | Small always-on device can still matter. |
| 0.5 Mbps | 162 GB | Useful low-rate monthly anchor. |
| 1 Mbps | 324 GB | One Mbps is not tiny across a whole month. |
| 2 Mbps | 648 GB | May exceed smaller mobile plans. |
| 5 Mbps | 1620 GB | About 1.62 TB in 30 days. |
| 10 Mbps | 3240 GB | Default example, about 3.24 TB. |
| 20 Mbps | 6480 GB | Large continuous system load. |
| 50 Mbps | 16200 GB | About 16.2 TB if genuinely continuous. |
| 100 Mbps | 32400 GB | About 32.4 TB at full use. |
| 1000 Mbps | 324000 GB | Gigabit full-use theoretical amount. |
Related Monthly Data Checks
| Check | Formula | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Mbps to GB/day | Mbps x 10.8 | Build monthly values from daily use. |
| Mbps to GB/hour | Mbps x 0.45 | Check shorter transfer windows. |
| GB/month to Mbps | GB/month / days / 10.8 | Find the continuous rate behind an allowance. |
| GB/month to TB/month | GB / 1000 | Read large monthly totals more easily. |
| Data cap share | monthly GB / cap GB x 100 | See how much of the allowance is used. |
| Active-hours adjustment | full-month value x hours / 24 | Model scheduled jobs. |
| Utilisation adjustment | active value x utilisation percent | Model average load. |
| 28-day month | daily amount x 28 | Useful for February-style periods. |
| 31-day month | daily amount x 31 | Useful for long calendar months. |
| Binary GiB | bits / 8 / 1,073,741,824 | Match software storage views. |
Monthly Data Cap Notes
When checking a data cap, compare like with like. Some providers count upload and download together. Some have account-level fair-use rules or traffic classes. Some routers report binary-style storage values while the plan is sold in decimal GB. The calculator cannot know those contract terms, so it shows the arithmetic and the cap share from the figures you enter.
For a cautious estimate, reduce the bitrate only if you have measured a real average. Do not lower utilisation simply to make a cap fit. If an always-on system might exceed the allowance, consider scheduling, compression settings, motion detection, lower bitrate profiles, local storage, a larger allowance or a fixed connection that suits sustained traffic.
Reconciling Router And Provider Totals
A router counter and a provider bill can differ. The router may reset on a calendar month, while the provider uses a billing cycle. The router may count local management traffic or exclude some modem-level overhead. The provider may count roaming, tethering, upload and download under one allowance. When the monthly estimate is close to a cap, record the billing start date, the counter reset date and the traffic types included before changing equipment or buying a larger plan.
For shared homes and small offices, add a separate allowance for normal browsing, calls, system updates and visitors. The converter covers the single sustained rate entered, so it should sit beside other monthly traffic notes rather than replace them. That extra line is often the difference between a comfortable cap and a surprise warning near the end of the month.
FAQs
How many GB per month is 1 Mbps?
One Mbps running continuously for 30 days is about 324 GB per month in decimal units. For 31 days it is about 334.8 GB. The result falls if active hours or utilisation are lower.
Why is the monthly result so large?
Small speeds become large amounts when they run for many hours. A month has hundreds of hours, so even 1 Mbps can move hundreds of gigabytes if it stays active continuously.
Should I use 30 days or the average month?
Use 30 days for many plan comparisons, 31 days for a specific long calendar month, and the average calendar month for annualised estimates. Provider billing periods may still differ.
Can this check a mobile broadband cap?
Yes, as a planning estimate. Enter the cap in GB and read the cap-share row. Then check whether the provider counts upload and download together and whether any traffic is excluded or restricted.
What is the difference between GB and GiB here?
GB uses decimal powers of 1000. GiB uses binary powers of 1024. Provider plans and storage products usually use decimal GB, while some software views use binary-style amounts.
Does this include other household or office traffic?
No. It converts the one rate entered. Add separate traffic for phones, laptops, video calls, updates and other devices if you are planning a shared monthly allowance.
Sources
- Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. (2019). The International System of Units, 9th ed. BIPM. https://www.bipm.org/en/publications/si-brochure
- National Institute of Standards and Technology. (2008). Guide for the Use of the International System of Units, Special Publication 811. NIST. https://www.nist.gov/pml/special-publication-811
- International Electrotechnical Commission. (n.d.). Prefixes for binary multiples. IEC. https://www.iec.ch/
