Bandwidth Usage Calculator

Analyze throughput, concurrency, and transfer demands with precision. Compare units, margins, and savings instantly, clearly. Plan faster networks before hidden usage spikes drain budgets.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Scenario Bitrate Users Utilization Hours/Day Days/Month Projected Usage
Training Video Portal 6 Mbps 80 65% 8 22 24.70 TB
Branch Office Backups 150 Mbps 4 40% 6 30 4.86 TB
Remote Desktop Fleet 2.5 Mbps 250 70% 9 26 44.29 TB
Campus CCTV Upload 3 Mbps 120 100% 24 30 116.64 TB

Formula Used

Average Aggregate Rate
Per User Bitrate × Concurrent Users × Utilization
Effective Average Rate
Average Aggregate Rate × (1 + Overhead) × (1 − Compression Savings)
Recommended Peak Capacity
Effective Average Rate × (1 + Peak Burst Margin) × (1 + Reserve Capacity)
Monthly Transfer
Effective Average Rate ÷ 8 × 3600 × Hours per Day × Days per Month

All percentages are converted to decimals before calculation. Transfer is derived from bits-to-bytes conversion, then scaled across hourly, daily, and monthly operating windows.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter a traffic profile name to label the scenario.
  2. Add the per-user bitrate and choose the correct unit.
  3. Enter expected concurrent users rather than total registered users.
  4. Set average utilization to reflect real session activity.
  5. Provide operating hours and active billing days.
  6. Adjust overhead, compression savings, burst margin, and reserve capacity.
  7. Add a monthly data cap and overage rate if relevant.
  8. Press Calculate Usage to display results above the form, then export them as CSV or PDF.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does utilization mean here?

Utilization represents the average active share of the total possible traffic load. It prevents every user from being modeled at full bitrate all the time.

2. Why include protocol overhead?

Real traffic includes headers, retransmissions, encryption overhead, and control data. Adding overhead gives a more realistic estimate than using payload bitrate alone.

3. What is compression savings?

Compression savings reduces the average traffic rate after optimization. Use it for caching, codec efficiency, WAN optimization, or other traffic reduction methods.

4. Why is peak capacity higher than average usage?

Networks must absorb bursts above the long-term average. Peak margin and reserve capacity help size circuits for spikes, failover, and short congestion events.

5. Should I use decimal or binary units?

This calculator uses decimal network units, where 1 GB equals 1,000,000,000 bytes. That matches many ISP bills and carrier reporting conventions.

6. Can I estimate data cap exhaustion time?

Yes. When you provide a monthly cap, the tool estimates how many operating days are needed to consume that allowance at the projected daily transfer rate.

7. Does this work for backups and CCTV streams?

Yes. It can model backups, camera uploads, streaming, remote desktops, patch distribution, and similar workloads as long as you choose realistic bitrate and activity assumptions.

8. Why might actual bills still differ?

Carrier rounding, billing windows, 95th percentile charging, retransmissions, outages, or shared burst behavior can shift real invoices away from modeled usage.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.