MB to KB Converter
Convert megabytes (MB) to kilobytes (KB). 1 MB equals 1000 KB (decimal). Used for file size limits on uploads and emails.
Megabyte to Kilobyte table
| Megabyte (MB) | Kilobyte (KB) |
|---|---|
| 1 MB | 1000 KB |
| 2 MB | 2000 KB |
| 5 MB | 5000 KB |
| 10 MB | 10000 KB |
| 25 MB | 25000 KB |
| 50 MB | 50000 KB |
| 100 MB | 100000 KB |
| 250 MB | 250000 KB |
| 500 MB | 500000 KB |
| 1000 MB | 1.0000e+6 KB |
This mb to kb helps you convert measurements instantly and compare common values in the live conversion table. It supports metric, imperial, scientific, time, and digital size units and is ideal for convert file sizes for upload limits, storage plans, and email attachments, compare kb, mb, gb, tb, and byte values for technical documentation and estimate whether a file fits a platform or hosting limit.
Unlike other tools, ConvertWiki focuses on speed, simplicity, and privacy. Unit conversions run directly in your browser and do not require an account.
You can use this tool for:
- Convert file sizes for upload limits, storage plans, and email attachments
- Compare KB, MB, GB, TB, and byte values for technical documentation
- Estimate whether a file fits a platform or hosting limit
How to use this tool:
- Type the value you want to convert.
- Choose the source and target units.
- Read the converted result and common conversion table instantly.
Why use ConvertWiki?
About MB to KB
MB to KB helps you translate one measurement system into another without remembering formulas. Enter a value and the result updates instantly in the matching target unit.
This is useful when data values appear in different standards across recipes, listings, technical docs, travel information, product specs, or forms.
Useful for
- Convert file sizes for upload limits, storage plans, and email attachments
- Compare KB, MB, GB, TB, and byte values for technical documentation
- Estimate whether a file fits a platform or hosting limit
Frequently Asked Questions
1 MB equals 1000 KB in decimal (SI) or 1024 KiB in binary (IEC).
Multiply the MB value by 1000 (decimal) or 1024 (binary).
It is at the upper limit of common email providers (typically 20-25 MB).
Yes, it is completely free with no signup required.