Conversion tool
Convert kilobytes to gigabytes instantly
Enter a value, see the result, copy it, and save a PDF snapshot.
Input
Type a value, then press Enter to calculate.
Result
0.000 GB
Rounded for readability. Use the arrows to increase or decrease the number of shown digits.
Estimation mode
Enter your estimate in GB, then reveal to compare.
Reveal summary
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Disclaimer: Use calculations at your own risk. For critical applications, verify results against your governing standards/specifications.
How it works
We use GB = KB x 0.000001.
Exact relationship: 1 KB = 0.000001 GB.
Example: 1 KB = 0.000 GB.
Notes: Results are rounded in the default view.
Examples
- 1 KB = 0.000 GB
- 100 KB = 0.000 GB
- 2048 KB = 0.002 GB
FAQ
What physical quantity do kilobytes and gigabytes express?
Kilobytes express smaller decimal-scaled data quantities and are common where byte counts would be too granular. Gigabytes express larger decimal data quantities and are common in storage-device, transfer, and capacity discussions.
What is the difference between kilobytes and gigabytes?
Kilobytes and gigabytes both express digital data size, but they are favored at different scales and may follow decimal or binary conventions.
What is the history of the kilobyte?
Kilobytes emerged as digital systems needed more convenient decimal-scaled ways to report data size.
What is the history of the gigabyte?
Gigabytes became a standard consumer and engineering reporting unit as disk, memory, and transfer volumes increased.
Were the kilobyte and gigabyte discovered by a specific person?
The kilobyte is a standardized scaled unit rather than a one-person discovery. The gigabyte is a scaled digital unit rather than a natural quantity discovered by one person.
Where are kilobytes and gigabytes used in science and engineering?
Kilobytes are used in document sizes, logs, firmware files, and lightweight data transfers. Gigabytes are used in storage devices, backups, datasets, downloads, and infrastructure planning.
Why do data-size units matter in calculations?
Data-size units affect storage planning, memory sizing, file-transfer expectations, logging, and capacity reporting. Keeping the unit attached helps prevent confusion between decimal and binary conventions.
Can I trust this for technical planning?
Use this for convenience and verify against vendor documentation, system reporting, or your governing standard for critical work. Storage and memory tools sometimes mix decimal and binary units, so context still matters.
References
- Exact constant used: 1 KB = 0.000001 GB.
- Data-size conversions are derived from consistent relationships anchored to the byte.