Convert Petabyte to Byte (PB → B)
The petabyte rates large data centers, scientific archives, and major social-media storage systems worldwide.
Petabyte to Byte Conversion Table
10 common values| Petabyte | Byte |
|---|---|
| 1 PB | 1,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 10 PB | 10,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 100 PB | 100,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 500 PB | 500,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 1,000 PB | 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 5,000 PB | 5,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 10,000 PB | 10,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 50,000 PB | 50,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 100,000 PB | 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
| 500,000 PB | 500,000,000,000,000,000,000 B |
How to Convert Petabyte to Byte Manually
Step by StepConverting petabytes to bytes is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in petabytesStart with the number of petabytes (PB) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 1,000,000,000,000,000The conversion factor from PB to B is 1,000,000,000,000,000. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in bytesThe result is your value in bytes (B).
Formula
Multiply the value in petabytes by 1,000,000,000,000,000. For the reverse direction, multiply by 1 × 10^-15.
B = PB × 1,000,000,000,000,000PB = B × 1 × 10^-15Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 PB = 1000 TB = 10¹⁵ B.
- PiB uses binary multiples — rare in everyday context.
- Scale beyond PB: EB (exabyte, 10¹⁸) and ZB (zettabyte, 10²¹).
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using PB when TB suffices — everyday use rarely needs PB.
- Mixing PB and PiB — 12.6% difference.
- Ignoring tape vs spinning-disk storage economics at PB scale.
About Petabyte and Byte
What is the Petabyte?
The petabyte (PB) equals 1,000 terabytes (10¹⁵ bytes decimal) and rates large data centers, scientific research archives, and major social-media storage systems worldwide. The Large Hadron Collider generates about 30 petabytes of data per year, the U.S. Library of Congress digital collection is in the petabytes range, and major cloud-storage providers manage exabytes (1,000 PB) of data across their fleets. A petabyte could store roughly 250 million MP3 songs or about 13.3 years of HD video. The petabyte relates to the terabyte (1,000 TB = 1 PB), the exabyte (1,000 PB = 1 EB), and the gigabyte (10⁶ GB = 1 PB). Modern hyperscale data centers (Google, Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Meta) store hundreds of petabytes per facility. The next consumer milestone — the petabyte hard drive — is expected within the next decade.
- Cloud-provider storage capacity
- Scientific datasets (CERN, genomics)
- Media archives and streaming libraries
Netflix total catalog: many PB. CERN LHC data: 100+ PB/year. YouTube uploads: EB scale now.
What is the Byte?
The byte equals 8 bits and is the smallest addressable storage unit in modern computing and digital systems. Byte-sized addresses are universal in computer architectures from microcontrollers to supercomputers, making the byte the fundamental block of memory and storage. A single ASCII character is 1 byte (256 possible values), basic UTF-8 characters use 1–4 bytes, and a UTF-16 character uses 2 bytes. File sizes, RAM capacity, and disk space are all measured in bytes and their multiples. The byte relates to the bit (1 byte = 8 bits), the kilobyte (1,000 or 1,024 bytes — see decimal vs. binary), the kibibyte (1,024 bytes, the strict computing standard), and larger multiples (MB, GB, TB). Note: storage manufacturers use decimal (1 GB = 10⁹ bytes), while operating systems often use binary (1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes), causing the famous discrepancy where a '1 TB drive' shows about 931 GB free.
- File sizes everywhere (documents, images, video)
- RAM and storage capacity
- Character encoding in programming
An ASCII character: 1 byte. A short text message: few hundred bytes. Uncompressed photo: few MB.