Back to Data

byte (B) → terabyte (TB)

Instant conversion - enter value to see result

Use our free online converter to convert between units instantly. Enter any value in the field above to get accurate results. No signup or download required—all conversions run in your browser. Our calculator uses standard conversion factors for reliability.

0
B=TB
1=0
2=0
4=0
8=0
16=0
32=0
64=0
128=0
256=0
512=0
1024=0

Brief explanation: byte to terabyte

Byte = 8 bits. 1 KB = 1024 bytes in binary (KiB). 1 MB = 1024 KB. Some storage providers use decimal (1000 bytes = 1 KB). GB and TB are used for storage capacity. The binary system (1024) is used by operating systems. The decimal system (1000) is sometimes used by manufacturers. Our converter uses the binary standard (1024) for consistency with most software.

Related converters

Common conversion examples: byte to terabyte

Reference values for quick comparison. Use the converter above for any amount.

  • 1 byte=0 terabyte
  • 1.02e+3 byte=0 terabyte
  • 1.05e+6 byte=0 terabyte

About the Units

byte (B)

Definition: A byte (B) is a unit of digital information. One byte equals 8 bits and can represent 256 values (0–255). It is the fundamental unit for character encoding and data storage.
History: The byte was coined by Werner Buchholz in 1956. It became standard as the smallest addressable unit in computer memory. ASCII uses one byte per character.
Current use: Bytes measure file size, memory, and data transfer. A single character typically uses one byte. Small files and buffer sizes are measured in bytes.

terabyte (TB)

Definition: A terabyte (TB) is 1,024 gigabytes or about 1 trillion bytes. It is used for large storage systems, backups, and data centers.
History: The terabyte became common as consumer storage reached hundreds of gigabytes. External drives and cloud storage now offer terabytes.
Current use: Terabytes measure hard drives, cloud storage, and data center capacity. A 1 TB drive holds about 250,000 photos. Video production and servers use TB.

Sources

Conversion factors and unit definitions follow international standards. For authoritative references, see: