What is Bitrate?

Bitrate measures how much data per second is used in an audio or video file. Clear explanation of Bitrate with examples, how it works, and why it matters for.

Free online file converter tool. Works in Chrome Firefox Safari Edge Opera and other modern browsers on Windows macOS Linux Android and iOS. No software installation or sign-up required. All conversions run directly in your browser, so your files never leave your device. Free to use with no account needed.

What is Bitrate?

Bitrate measures how much data per second is used in an audio or video file

Last updated:

Bitrate: Simple Definition

Bitrate is the amount of data used per second in an audio or video file, measured in kilobits per second (kbps) or megabits per second (Mbps). Higher bitrate means better quality but larger file size.

Think of bitrate like water flow in a pipe. A higher bitrate is like a wider pipe - more data flows per second, resulting in better quality. A lower bitrate is a narrower pipe - less data, smaller files, but lower quality.

How Bitrate Is Measured

Bitrate expresses how many bits represent one second of media; for a stored file it can be estimated by dividing the file size in bits by its duration in seconds.[1] The figures are quoted in kbps or Mbps, and because they count bits rather than bytes, a 1 Mbps stream transfers roughly 125 kilobytes each second.[1]

Constant versus Variable Bitrate

Encoders can hold the bitrate steady (CBR) or let it rise and fall with scene complexity (VBR). Variable bitrate spends more data on detailed or fast-moving passages and less on simple ones, generally yielding better quality per byte, while constant bitrate offers predictable bandwidth useful for live streaming.[1]

Bitrate, Resolution and Quality

Bitrate is not quality by itself; the same bitrate looks sharp at low resolution but blocky at 4K, because the available bits are spread across many more pixels.[2] Efficient codecs deliver comparable quality at lower bitrates, which is why recommended bitrate ranges are always tied to a specific codec and resolution.[2]

How Bitrate Affects Quality

For video, bitrate directly controls image quality. A 1080p video at 2Mbps will look noticeably worse than the same video at 8Mbps. YouTube recommends 8Mbps for 1080p60 uploads.

For audio, bitrate determines sound quality. MP3 at 128kbps is acceptable for casual listening. 320kbps is considered near-CD quality. FLAC (lossless) has variable bitrate of 700-1400kbps.

Examples of Bitrate

128kbps MP3

Standard audio streaming quality. Good for casual listening on earbuds. File: ~1MB per minute.

320kbps MP3

High quality audio. Near-identical to CD quality for most listeners. File: ~2.5MB per minute.

4Mbps video

Good quality for 720p video streaming. Used by Netflix for SD streams.

8Mbps video

Good quality for 1080p video. YouTube recommends 8Mbps for 1080p60 uploads.

Work With Your Files

Now that you understand the concept, use our free tools to convert, compress, and optimize your files.

Try Audio Converter Free

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good bitrate for video?

For 1080p: 8-12Mbps. For 4K: 35-68Mbps. For YouTube uploads: follow YouTube's recommended bitrates.

What is a good bitrate for audio?

For music: 256-320kbps MP3 or 256kbps AAC. For podcasts/speech: 128kbps. For archiving: use lossless FLAC.

Does higher bitrate always mean better quality?

Up to a point, yes. Above a certain threshold, further increases in bitrate provide diminishing returns that are imperceptible.

What bitrate does Spotify use?

Spotify streams at 24kbps (low), 96kbps (normal), 160kbps (high), and 320kbps (very high, Premium only).

How do I check the bitrate of my video?

Right-click the video file > Properties > Details tab on Windows. Or use VLC: Tools > Media Information > Statistics.

References

  1. Bit rate - Wikipedia
  2. Web video codec guide - MDN Web Docs