Video Tool

Video Bitrate Calculator

Calculate the optimal video and audio bitrate for your resolution, frame rate, and codec before you export. Avoid over-compressing or wasting storage — get the exact number your encoder needs.

Bitrate Settings
Quick Presets
Recommended Total Bitrate
Mbps
Quality Level
PlatformTheir LimitYour SettingStatus

What Is Video Bitrate?

Bitrate is the amount of data used per second of video, measured in Megabits per second (Mbps) or Kilobits per second (Kbps). Higher bitrate means more data = better quality, but also larger file size and higher streaming bandwidth requirements.

Choosing the right bitrate depends on your resolution, codec, frame rate, and use case. A 4K video at 10 Mbps will look terrible. A 720p video at 50 Mbps is wasted data. This calculator gives you the right number for your specific situation.

Why Use This Tool

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Export Right First Time

Get the exact bitrate number to enter in Premiere, DaVinci, or HandBrake without guessing.

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Avoid Wasted Storage

Over-encoding wastes gigabytes. Under-encoding ruins quality. The right bitrate wastes nothing.

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Platform Comparison

See how your bitrate compares to what YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram actually process.

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Codec-aware

H.265 and AV1 need different bitrates than H.264 for the same quality — the calculator knows the difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

YouTube recommends 8 Mbps for 1080p at 30fps and 12 Mbps for 1080p at 60fps with H.264. For H.265, you can achieve the same quality at roughly half the bitrate (4–6 Mbps). YouTube re-encodes everything anyway, so uploading at a higher bitrate (16+ Mbps) gives the encoder more to work with.
H.265 (HEVC) uses more advanced compression algorithms that can encode the same visual quality as H.264 using approximately 50% less data. This means a 4 Mbps H.265 video looks similar to an 8 Mbps H.264 video. The trade-off is that H.265 requires more processing power to encode and decode.
CBR (Constant Bit Rate) uses the same bitrate throughout the entire video. VBR (Variable Bit Rate) adjusts the bitrate dynamically — using more bits for complex scenes (fast action) and fewer for simple ones (static backgrounds). VBR produces better quality at the same average file size. Use CBR for live streaming; VBR for pre-recorded content.
Yes, to a point. YouTube re-encodes every video after upload. If you upload at a higher bitrate, YouTube’s encoder has more source data to work with, which typically results in a slightly better final encoding on their end. Uploading at 2× the recommended bitrate is a common practice among professional creators.

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