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What is Video File Size Calculator?

A Video File Size Calculator computes video file size from the inputs you provide. It applies the standard formula to the values you enter and returns the result instantly, without sending any data to a server. H.264, H.265, AV1. The.

Video File Size Calculator

Bitrate × duration = file size. 4K HDR ~25-50 MB/min, 1080p ~10-20.

Inputs

min

Estimated File Size

-

Breakdown

Per minute
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Bitrate
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Storage 100 hrs
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Note
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About

Video size = (bitrate + audio bitrate) × duration. Modern codecs (H.265, AV1) deliver same quality at 30-50% lower bitrate vs H.264. Streaming services compress aggressively (Netflix 4K ~16 Mbps). Local archives often higher.

Formula

size_GB = (video_Mbps + audio_Mbps) × duration_seconds / 8 / 1024

Frequently asked questions

How accurate is the Video File Size Calculator?

It applies the standard formula. Accuracy is limited only by your input precision. For decisions with material consequences (taxes, medical, legal, structural), use the result as a starting point and verify with a qualified professional in the relevant field.

Is the Video File Size Calculator free to use?

Yes. 100% free, no signup, no payment, no API key. The site is funded by display ads around the tool but not inside the calculation flow.

Are my inputs saved anywhere?

No. All inputs stay in your browser tab. Closing the tab discards them. The site uses Google Analytics for traffic measurement (anonymized) but the analytics never see what you type into the form.

Can I use the Video File Size Calculator on my phone?

Yes. The tool is responsive and tested on iOS Safari, Android Chrome, and major desktop browsers. Touch targets meet Apple's 44pt and Google's 48dp minimum.

Does the Video File Size Calculator work offline?

Yes. Once the page has loaded, it works without internet. The calculation runs in JavaScript on your device.

How do I report a bug or suggest improvement to the Video File Size Calculator?

Email hi@3tej.com with the URL of this page and a description of what you saw vs expected. We typically respond within 72 hours.

Can I share results from the Video File Size Calculator?

Take a screenshot or copy the output. The page doesn't generate shareable URLs for specific calculations - inputs stay in your browser only.

Why are the results different from another video file size tool?

Most likely: different formula assumptions, different default values, different rounding rules, or different applicable rates. Check the methodology if both tools document it. Both can be valid for different scenarios.

Is my video uploaded anywhere?

No. All processing happens in your browser using Web Codecs / FFmpeg.wasm. Files stay in your tab's memory. Disconnect from the internet after page load and the tool still works.

Why is conversion slow?

Video re-encoding is CPU-intensive. A 1-minute 1080p clip can take 30-90 seconds to encode in the browser - desktop apps with hardware acceleration are 5-10x faster. Use this tool for short clips; for hour-long footage use HandBrake or FFmpeg on your machine.

Will the converted file lose quality?

Yes, slightly, if the source and destination are both lossy formats. Going from H.264 to H.264 at the same bitrate adds a small amount of generation loss. Going from H.264 to a lossless codec preserves the existing quality but doesn't restore what was lost on the first encode.

Can I convert between any two formats?

Most common pairs (MP4 <-> WebM, MP3 <-> AAC, WAV <-> FLAC) work in any modern browser. Exotic codecs (ProRes, FFV1, JPEG 2000) may require FFmpeg.wasm and run slowly.

What's the maximum file size I can process?

Practical limit is your browser's available memory (typically 2-4 GB). 30-minute 1080p videos process fine. 2-hour 4K source files may crash the tab; use a desktop tool for those.

How browser-based audio/video tools work

Modern browsers ship with Web Codecs API, MediaRecorder, and Web Audio API - enough to decode, manipulate, and re-encode most media formats client-side. This tool uses those APIs (with FFmpeg.wasm as a fallback for less common codecs).

The processing flow

  1. File is loaded as a binary Uint8Array.
  2. The codec is detected from the container (MP4 = MPEG-4, MKV = Matroska, WebM = WebM) and the codec atoms.
  3. Frames are decoded into raw audio samples (PCM) or video frames (YCbCr / RGB).
  4. The requested transformation (trim, convert, resize) is applied frame-by-frame.
  5. Frames are re-encoded into the output codec and packaged into the output container.

Common audio/video formats

ContainerCommon codecsBest for
MP4H.264 / H.265 video, AAC audioUniversal compatibility; default for web video
WebMVP9 / AV1 video, Opus audioOpen-source web standard; smaller than MP4
MKVAny codec (container only)High-quality archival; not browser-native
MOVProRes / H.264, PCM / AACApple ecosystem; ProRes for professional editing
MP3MP3 audio onlyUniversal audio; lossy
WAVPCM audio (lossless)Editing source; CD-quality archival
FLACLossless compressed audioMusic archival; ~50% of WAV size, perfect quality
AAC / M4AAdvanced Audio CodingiOS default; better quality than MP3 at same bitrate

Lossy vs lossless

  • Lossy (MP3, AAC, Opus, H.264): discards data the human ear/eye can't notice. 80-90% size reduction. Each re-encode loses more quality (generation loss).
  • Lossless (FLAC, WAV, ALAC, FFV1): bit-perfect reproduction. ~50% size of raw. Each re-encode is identical to the source.

Bitrate quick reference

Use caseAudio bitrateVideo bitrate (1080p)
Voice (phone, podcast)32-64 kbpsn/a
Music (mid-quality)128 kbps MP3n/a
Music (transparent)256-320 kbps MP3 or 128 kbps Opusn/a
Streaming HDn/a5,000-8,000 kbps
Streaming 4Kn/a15,000-25,000 kbps
ArchivalFLAC losslessProRes 422 or H.265 CRF 18

The formula explained

This calculator uses the following formula:

size_GB = (video_Mbps + audio_Mbps) × duration_seconds / 8 / 1024

The reason this formula works is rooted in the underlying physics, finance, or biology of the problem. Behind every calculator is a published, peer-reviewed equation or a widely accepted convention. We do not invent formulas; we apply standard ones from textbooks, government tables, professional bodies, and academic literature.

If you are curious about the math, the simplest way to verify is to plug in two known numbers and compare against a known result. The calculator should match published examples to within rounding precision.