Exabytes Per Second (EB/s) to Petabytes Per Second (PB/s) Converter
Type a value into the Exabytes Per Second (EB/s) field to convert to Petabytes Per Second (PB/s). 1 EB/s = 1,000 PB/s, covering both bit-based and byte-based transfer rate units.
Convert Exabytes Per Second to Petabytes Per Second
1 EB/s equals
1,000
PB/s
Do you want to convert petabytes per second to exabytes per second?
How to Convert Exabytes Per Second to Petabytes Per Second
To convert exabytes per second to petabytes per second, multiply by 1,000. Both units measure actual data throughput in bytes per second—useful for comparing storage benchmarks, file transfer speeds, and backup performance. See also: PB/s → EB/s.
EB/s: An exabyte per second is 1,000 petabytes per second. Theoretical unit for future computing systems. Common uses include Theoretical capacity planning, future computing projections, academic research. Try the Exabytes Per Second to Yobibits Per Second.
PB/s: A petabyte per second is 1,000 terabytes per second. Used for supercomputer storage and hyperscale systems. Typically used for Supercomputer storage, hyperscale data centers, exascale computing, theoretical capacity. See also: Mebibytes Per Second to Petabytes Per Second converter.
1 EB/s = 1,000 PB/s — which means there are 1,000petabytes per second in every exabyte per second.
EB/s to PB/s Conversion Formula
// Convert EB/s to PB/s
PB/s = EB/s × 1,000
// Reverse: Convert PB/s to EB/s
EB/s = PB/s × 0.001
EB/s to PB/s Conversion Examples
10 EB/s = 10,000 PB/s
50 EB/s = 50,000 PB/s
100 EB/s = 100,000 PB/s
500 EB/s = 500,000 PB/s
1,000 EB/s = 1,000,000 PB/s
What Is Exabyte Per Second (EB/s)?
An exabyte per second is 1,000 petabytes per second. Theoretical unit for future computing systems. Try the Pebibytes Per Second to Exabits Per Second calculator.
The exabyte per second is a byte-based throughput unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. You might also need: convert Pebibytes to Exabits.
Common uses: Theoretical capacity planning, future computing projections, academic research Check out our Exabytes Per Second to Yottabits Per Second conversion.
1 EB/s = 8000000 × 10¹² bits per second.
The exabyte per second can be abbreviated as EB/s; for example, 1 exabyte per second can be written as 1 EB/s.
What Is Petabyte Per Second (PB/s)?
A petabyte per second is 1,000 terabytes per second. Used for supercomputer storage and hyperscale systems. Try the B/s to Petabytes Per Second converter.
The petabyte per second is a byte-based throughput unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. Learn more: Exbibytes Per Second to TiB/s calculator.
Common uses: Supercomputer storage, hyperscale data centers, exascale computing, theoretical capacity See also: convert KB to Tebibytes.
1 PB/s = 8000 × 10¹² bits per second.
The petabyte per second can be abbreviated as PB/s; for example, 1 petabyte per second can be written as 1 PB/s.
Exabyte Per Second to Petabyte Per Second Conversion Table
The table below shows various exabyte per second measurements converted to petabytes per second.
| Exabytes Per Second | Petabytes Per Second |
|---|---|
| 0.1 EB/s | 100 PB/s |
| 0.5 EB/s | 500 PB/s |
| 1 EB/s | 1,000 PB/s |
| 5 EB/s | 5,000 PB/s |
| 10 EB/s | 10,000 PB/s |
| 25 EB/s | 25,000 PB/s |
| 50 EB/s | 50,000 PB/s |
| 100 EB/s | 100,000 PB/s |
| 250 EB/s | 250,000 PB/s |
| 500 EB/s | 500,000 PB/s |
| 1,000 EB/s | 1,000,000 PB/s |
💡 Storage Engineer Tip
Both units measure throughput. NVMe SSDs can reach 3+ GB/s, SATA SSDs max at ~0.5 GB/s, and typical HDDs do 100-200 MB/s.
— Subash Geetha Krishnan, 15+ years in enterprise storage & networking
When to Convert EB/s to PB/s
Common scenario: Comparing throughput rates for storage benchmarks and transfer calculations. Check out our Exabytes Per Second to EiB/s.
Other situations include ISP speed verification for checking if you're getting advertised speeds, network planning for sizing links and capacity, backup window calculations for estimating transfer times, and replication sizing for disaster recovery planning. Try the how many PB/s in Megabytes Per Second.