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Terabits Per Second (Tbps) to Megabits Per Second (Mbps) Converter

Type a value into the Terabits Per Second (Tbps) field to convert to Megabits Per Second (Mbps). 1 Tbps = 1,000,000 Mbps, covering both bit-based and byte-based transfer rate units.

Convert Terabits Per Second to Megabits Per Second

Conversion Result

100 Tbps = 100,000,000 Mbps

Learn how we calculated this below

1 Tbps equals

1,000,000

Mbps

Terabit Per Second (Tbps) explained understanding Mbps - Megabits Per Second

Do you want to convert megabits per second to terabits per second?

How to Convert Terabits Per Second to Megabits Per Second

To convert terabits per second to megabits per second, multiply by 1,000,000. Both units measure network bandwidth in bits per second—the difference is simply the scale. Try the convert Mbps to Tbps.

Tbps: A terabit per second is 1,000 gigabits per second. Used for backbone networks and data center interconnects. Common uses include Backbone networks, submarine cables, data center fabrics, high-speed interconnects. You might also need: Tbps to GiB/s calculator.

Mbps: A megabit per second is 1,000,000 bits per second. The standard unit for home internet speeds. Typically used for Home internet speeds, WiFi connections, streaming video quality. You might also need: Ebps to Mbps converter.

1 Tbps = 1,000,000 Mbps — which means there are 1,000,000megabits per second in every terabit per second.

Tbps to Mbps Conversion Formula

// Convert Tbps to Mbps

Mbps = Tbps × 1,000,000

// Reverse: Convert Mbps to Tbps

Tbps = Mbps × 0.000001

Tbps to Mbps Conversion Examples

10 Tbps = 10,000,000 Mbps

50 Tbps = 50,000,000 Mbps

100 Tbps = 100,000,000 Mbps

500 Tbps = 500,000,000 Mbps

1,000 Tbps = 1,000,000,000 Mbps

What Is Terabit Per Second (Tbps)?

A terabit per second is 1,000 gigabits per second. Used for backbone networks and data center interconnects. Related: YiB/s to Eibps.

The terabit per second is a bit-based bandwidth unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. Try the Nibbles in Kilobytes.

Common uses: Backbone networks, submarine cables, data center fabrics, high-speed interconnects Check out our converting Terabits Per Second to Yobibits Per Second.

1 Tbps = 1 × 10¹² bits per second.

The terabit per second can be abbreviated as Tbps; for example, 1 terabit per second can be written as 1 Tbps.

Learn more about terabits per second →

What Is Megabit Per Second (Mbps)?

A megabit per second is 1,000,000 bits per second. The standard unit for home internet speeds. Use our bps to Mbps conversion rate.

The megabit per second is a bit-based bandwidth unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. Check out our calculate KiB/s to TiB/s.

Common uses: Home internet speeds, WiFi connections, streaming video quality Learn more: how many Gigabits in a MiB.

1 Mbps = 1 × 10⁶ bits per second.

The megabit per second can be abbreviated as Mbps; for example, 1 megabit per second can be written as 1 Mbps.

Learn more about megabits per second →

Terabit Per Second to Megabit Per Second Conversion Table

The table below shows various terabit per second measurements converted to megabits per second.

Terabits Per Second Megabits Per Second
0.1 Tbps 100,000 Mbps
0.5 Tbps 500,000 Mbps
1 Tbps 1,000,000 Mbps
5 Tbps 5,000,000 Mbps
10 Tbps 10,000,000 Mbps
25 Tbps 25,000,000 Mbps
50 Tbps 50,000,000 Mbps
100 Tbps 100,000,000 Mbps
250 Tbps 250,000,000 Mbps
500 Tbps 500,000,000 Mbps
1,000 Tbps 1,000,000,000 Mbps

💡 Storage Engineer Tip

Both units measure network bandwidth. Remember: 1 Gbps = 1,000 Mbps = 1,000,000 Kbps. Enterprise networks typically use Gbps while home broadband uses Mbps.

— Subash Geetha Krishnan, 15+ years in enterprise storage & networking

When to Convert Tbps to Mbps

Common scenario: Scaling between bandwidth measurements for network planning and speed comparisons. Check out our how many Zbps in Terabits Per Second.

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. Check out our YiB/s → Mbps.