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Terabytes Per Second (TB/s) to Mebibytes Per Second (MiB/s) Converter

Type a value into the Terabytes Per Second (TB/s) field to convert to Mebibytes Per Second (MiB/s). 1 TB/s = 953,674.316406 MiB/s, covering both bit-based and byte-based transfer rate units.

Convert Terabytes Per Second to Mebibytes Per Second

Conversion Result

100 TB/s = 95,367,432 MiB/s

Learn how we calculated this below

1 TB/s equals

953,674.316406

MiB/s

Terabyte Per Second conversion rates converting Mebibytes Per Second

Do you want to convert mebibytes per second to terabytes per second?

How to Convert Terabytes Per Second to Mebibytes Per Second

To convert terabytes per second to mebibytes per second, multiply by 953,674.316406. Both units measure actual data throughput in bytes per second—useful for comparing storage benchmarks, file transfer speeds, and backup performance. Learn more: MiB/s to TB/s conversion rate.

TB/s: A terabyte per second is 1,000 gigabytes per second. Used for the fastest storage systems. Common uses include HPC storage systems, supercomputer interconnects, cutting-edge storage. Use our calculate TB/s to YB/s.

MiB/s: A mebibyte per second is 1,024 kibibytes per second. Binary equivalent of MB/s. Typically used for Linux benchmarks, precise storage measurements, enterprise storage specs. Learn more: how many Mebibytes Per Second in a Zibps.

1 TB/s = 953,674.316406 MiB/s — which means there are 953,674.316406mebibytes per second in every terabyte per second.

TB/s to MiB/s Conversion Formula

// Convert TB/s to MiB/s

MiB/s = TB/s × 953,674.316406

// Reverse: Convert MiB/s to TB/s

TB/s = MiB/s × 0.000001048576

TB/s to MiB/s Conversion Examples

10 TB/s = 9,536,743 MiB/s

50 TB/s = 47,683,716 MiB/s

100 TB/s = 95,367,432 MiB/s

500 TB/s = 476,837,158 MiB/s

1,000 TB/s = 953,674,316 MiB/s

What Is Terabyte Per Second (TB/s)?

A terabyte per second is 1,000 gigabytes per second. Used for the fastest storage systems. See also: how many EB/s in Kibibytes Per Second.

The terabyte per second is a byte-based throughput unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. See also: Yottabits to Yib.

Common uses: HPC storage systems, supercomputer interconnects, cutting-edge storage Related: convert TB/s to Gigabytes Per Second.

1 TB/s = 8 × 10¹² bits per second.

The terabyte per second can be abbreviated as TB/s; for example, 1 terabyte per second can be written as 1 TB/s.

Learn more about terabytes per second →

What Is Mebibyte Per Second (MiB/s)?

A mebibyte per second is 1,024 kibibytes per second. Binary equivalent of MB/s. Use our Megabytes Per Second to MiB/s calculator.

The mebibyte per second is a binary byte-based unit measuring data transfer speed, network bandwidth, or throughput capacity. Learn more: Eibps to Pebibits Per Second converter.

Common uses: Linux benchmarks, precise storage measurements, enterprise storage specs Related: Exbibits to Nibbles conversion.

1 MiB/s = 8 × 10⁶ bits per second.

The mebibyte per second can be abbreviated as MiB/s; for example, 1 mebibyte per second can be written as 1 MiB/s.

Learn more about mebibytes per second →

Terabyte Per Second to Mebibyte Per Second Conversion Table

The table below shows various terabyte per second measurements converted to mebibytes per second.

Terabytes Per Second Mebibytes Per Second
0.1 TB/s 95,367.43164063 MiB/s
0.5 TB/s 476,837.15820313 MiB/s
1 TB/s 953,674.31640625 MiB/s
5 TB/s 4,768,372 MiB/s
10 TB/s 9,536,743 MiB/s
25 TB/s 23,841,858 MiB/s
50 TB/s 47,683,716 MiB/s
100 TB/s 95,367,432 MiB/s
250 TB/s 238,418,579 MiB/s
500 TB/s 476,837,158 MiB/s
1,000 TB/s 953,674,316 MiB/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 TB/s to MiB/s

Common scenario: Comparing throughput rates for storage benchmarks and transfer calculations. You might also need: convert Terabytes Per Second to Exbibits 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. You might also need: converting Gigabits Per Second to Mebibytes Per Second.