1 gig (1 Gbps) is equal to 1000 Mbps in networking terms.

Quick Scoop: How many Mbps is 1 gig?

When people say “1 gig internet,” they almost always mean 1 gigabit per second (1 Gbps) , which converts like this:

  • 1 gigabit (Gb) = 1000 megabits (Mb)
  • So 1 Gbps = 1000 Mbps (megabits per second)
  • In terms of download speed in megabytes per second: 1 Gbps ≈ 125 MB/s (because 8 bits = 1 byte).

An everyday picture: a 5 GB game download (about 5000 MB) on a perfect 1 Gbps line could theoretically finish in under a minute, though real-world overhead usually makes it slower.

Mini breakdown (for clarity)

  • Bits vs bytes : Internet speeds are advertised in bits (Mbps, Gbps), but files are measured in bytes (MB, GB).
  • Key formulas :
    • 1 Gbps = 1000 Mbps
* Mbps ÷ 8 ≈ MB/s (download speed you see in apps).

So if you see a provider selling “1 Gig internet,” you can read that as 1000 Mbps plan.