Hand holding a 128GB SD memory card against a dark background

Video Storage Calculator: GB per Hour for Every Codec

How much storage does an hour of footage actually eat? This page is the answer, for every codec you’re likely to touch, precomputed in GB per hour so nobody has to do bitrate algebra at 11pm before a shoot. If you ingest, shoot, or budget storage on the regular, bookmark this one. Cmd+D on a Mac, Ctrl+D on a PC. You know the drill.

Every number below comes from the primary source: Apple’s ProRes white paper, Avid’s DNx bandwidth specs, Blackmagic’s published camera data rates, RED’s operation guides, Sony and Canon’s own spec sheets, and YouTube’s official upload recommendations. No blog-post telephone. Figures are decimal GB (the way drives are marketed), and video numbers exclude audio, which adds about 1GB per hour per stereo pair… a rounding error next to the picture.

The formula (for everything not on this page)

GB per hour = Mbps × 0.45. That’s it. A 220 Mbps codec is 99 GB per hour, and Apple’s own tables agree to the decimal. (The exact version: Mbps ÷ 8 × 3,600 seconds ÷ 1,000. It works out to × 0.45.) When a spec sheet gives MB/s instead, GB per hour = MB/s × 3.6. And data rate scales linearly with frame rate: 23.98 fps is 0.8× the 29.97 number, 50p is 2× the 25p number, 59.94p is 2× the 29.97 number. Those three rules unlock every table below for whatever frame rate you shoot.

The numbers you’ll actually use

Most days you need five numbers, not fifty. Here’s the shortlist; the full tables cover the rest.

CodecFlavorGB per hour1TB holds about
H.264/H.265 camera 4K (100-200 Mbps)Mirrorless Long GOP45-90 GB11-22 hrs
Sony XAVC S-I 4K 24pAll-intra acquisition108 GB9 hrs
ProRes 422 HQ, UHD 23.98The edit/master standard318 GB3 hrs
Blackmagic RAW 6K 5:1, 30fpsCompressed RAW698 GB1.4 hrs
REDCODE MQ, 8KCinema RAW (ceiling)~1,073 GB<1 hr

Apple ProRes

Apple publishes exact targets in the ProRes white paper; these are their numbers. ProRes is variable bitrate but capped at roughly 10% over target, so budgeting the target is safe.

ProRes at 1080p

Codec29.97 fpsGB/hr25 fpsGB/hr
ProRes 422 Proxy45 Mbps2038 Mbps17
ProRes 422 LT102 Mbps4685 Mbps38
ProRes 422147 Mbps66122 Mbps55
ProRes 422 HQ220 Mbps99184 Mbps83
ProRes 4444330 Mbps148275 Mbps124
ProRes 4444 XQ495 Mbps223413 Mbps186

ProRes at UHD (3840×2160)

Codec29.97 fpsGB/hr25 fpsGB/hr
ProRes 422 Proxy182 Mbps82151 Mbps68
ProRes 422 LT410 Mbps185342 Mbps154
ProRes 422589 Mbps265492 Mbps221
ProRes 422 HQ884 Mbps398737 Mbps332
ProRes 44441,326 Mbps5971,106 Mbps498
ProRes 4444 XQ1,989 Mbps8951,659 Mbps746

Handy anchors: ProRes 422 HQ UHD at 23.98 fps is 707 Mbps (318 GB/hr), at 59.94 fps it’s 1,768 Mbps (795 GB/hr), and DCI 4K (4096-wide) 29.97 runs 943 Mbps (424 GB/hr). All straight off Apple’s table, all consistent with the scaling rules up top.

Avid DNxHR / DNxHD

Avid publishes these in MB/s; converted here. Avid has also retired the old suffixes, so DNxHD 36/145/220 are now just DNx LB/SQ/HQ at 1080p. Fun spec-sheet trivia: HQ and HQX have identical bandwidth (HQX buys you 12-bit, not more compression).

CodecResolution29.97 fpsGB/hr25 fpsGB/hr
DNxHR LBUHD171 Mbps77143 Mbps64
DNxHR SQUHD551 Mbps248459 Mbps207
DNxHR HQ / HQXUHD833 Mbps375695 Mbps313
DNxHR 444UHD1,666 Mbps7501,390 Mbps625
DNx LB (was DNxHD 36)1080p43 Mbps1934.5 Mbps (23.98)15.5
DNx SQ (was DNxHD 145)1080p138 Mbps62n/an/a
DNx HQ (was DNxHD 220)1080p208 Mbps94n/an/a

Camera H.264 / H.265 (XAVC, XF-AVC, LUMIX)

FormatResolution / rateBitrateGB/hr
Sony XAVC S 4K (Long GOP)UHD 24p100 Mbps45
Sony XAVC S 4K (Long GOP, 10-bit)UHD 30p140 Mbps63
Sony XAVC S 4K (Long GOP)UHD 60p200 Mbps90
Sony XAVC S-I (All-Intra)UHD 24p240 Mbps108
Sony XAVC S-I (All-Intra)UHD 30p300 Mbps135
Sony XAVC S-I (All-Intra)UHD 60p600 Mbps270
Canon XF-AVC Intra (C70)DCI 4K 30p410 Mbps185
Canon XF-AVC Intra (C70)DCI 4K 60p600 Mbps270
Canon XF-AVC Long GOP (C70)DCI 4K 30p260 Mbps117
Panasonic LUMIX H.265 10-bitUHD 30p200 Mbps90
Panasonic LUMIX H.264 4:2:2 10-bitUHD 30p150 Mbps67.5

RAW formats (BRAW, REDCODE, ProRes RAW)

Blackmagic publishes constant-bitrate rates per camera; these are the Pocket Cinema line’s numbers at 30fps. The compression-ratio menu is the single biggest storage decision on a Blackmagic camera… same hour of footage, 4× the bytes between 12:1 and 3:1.

FormatResolutionRate (30 fps)GB/hr
BRAW 3:1DCI 4K136 MB/s490
BRAW 5:1DCI 4K82 MB/s295
BRAW 8:1DCI 4K51 MB/s184
BRAW 12:1DCI 4K35 MB/s126
BRAW 3:16K (6144×3456)323 MB/s1,163
BRAW 5:16K194 MB/s698
BRAW 8:16K121 MB/s436
BRAW 12:16K81 MB/s292
REDCODE HQ (ceiling)8K 17:9425 MB/s~1,530
REDCODE MQ (ceiling)8K 17:9298 MB/s~1,073
REDCODE LQ (ceiling)8K 17:9186 MB/s~670
REDCODE MQ (ceiling)6K 17:9168 MB/s~605
ProRes RAW (estimate)UHD 29.97~736 Mbps~331
ProRes RAW HQ (estimate)UHD 29.97~1,105 Mbps~497

Reading the asterisks: BRAW’s constant-quality modes (Q0 through Q5) and REDCODE vary with image content, so treat published rates as ceilings, not promises. ProRes RAW has no published targets at all; Apple only says it lands between ProRes 422 and 422 HQ (and the HQ flavor between 422 HQ and 4444), because it holds quality constant and lets the bitrate float. The estimates above are the midpoints of Apple’s own brackets, marked with a tilde for a reason. And if you’ve ever wondered why your old CinemaDNG masters are so huge: uncompressed 4K CinemaDNG runs north of a terabyte an hour, which is exactly why every camera maker replaced it with compressed RAW.

Delivery (YouTube’s recommended upload bitrates)

DeliverableSDR bitrateGB/hrHDR bitrateGB/hr
1080p 24-30fps8 Mbps3.610 Mbps4.5
1080p 48-60fps12 Mbps5.415 Mbps6.8
4K 24-30fps35-45 Mbps16-2044-56 Mbps20-25
4K 48-60fps53-68 Mbps24-3166-85 Mbps30-38

Audio (for completeness)

FormatBitrateGB/hr
WAV 24-bit/48kHz mono1.152 Mbps0.52
WAV 24-bit/48kHz stereo2.304 Mbps1.04
WAV 32-bit float/48kHz stereo3.072 Mbps1.38
WAV 24-bit/96kHz stereo4.608 Mbps2.07

Worked examples (the math in the wild)

The two-camera interview. A pair of FX3s in XAVC S-I 4K 24p (240 Mbps) rolling 90 minutes each: 2 × 1.5 hrs × 108 GB = 324 GB, before a single backup copy exists. Card math matters more than people think.

The proxy tax. A 1-hour UHD 29.97 project mastered in ProRes 422 HQ is 398 GB. Add ProRes Proxy proxies for the edit and you’re storing another 82 GB, about 21% more, for a dramatically lighter timeline. Worth it every time, but budget it.

The Blackmagic decision. One hour on a Pocket 6K at 30fps: 292 GB at 12:1, or 1,163 GB at 3:1. The menu setting you pick at 7am determines whether the shoot day fits on one SSD or four.

The doc that fills a NAS. A month of shooting at 400 GB/day, 20 shoot days: 8 TB of originals, 16 TB after the mandatory second copy. That’s half a 4-bay NAS from one project, which is why the storage conversation belongs in pre-production, not post.

The fine print (read once, then trust the tables)

These are decimal gigabytes, matching how drives are sold; your OS shows smaller GiB numbers for the same files, and no, the drive maker didn’t steal them. VBR codecs (ProRes, XAVC) treat the published figure as a target, and ProRes hard-caps about 10% above it, so the target is safe to budget. Add 1 to 2% for container overhead and embedded audio. And camera spec sheets change with firmware, so for a shoot that really matters, roll 60 seconds of your exact format and multiply. The sources for every table: Apple’s ProRes and ProRes RAW white papers, Avid’s DNxHR bandwidth KB, Blackmagic’s Pocket Cinema tech specs, RED’s V-RAPTOR operation guide, Sony’s a7S III/FX3 help guide, Canon’s C70 specs, and YouTube’s upload recommendations page.

Got your number? Here’s where it goes

Once you know a project’s terabytes, the rest of the site takes over: working drives for the edit are in the portable SSD guide, shared storage lives in the NAS guide and its hard drive companion, and what happens at wrap is covered in the archiving guide. Delivering something odd-shaped? The aspect ratio cheat sheet is this page’s sibling. Bookmark both and never do this math again.

Total
0
Shares
Related Posts
a woman using her phone while attached on a ring light

Must-Have Tools for UGC Creators

The ultimate toolkit for UGC creators: from essential filming gear like the game-changing iPhone 15 Pro to top editing software choices including CapCut and Adobe Premiere Pro. Learn how to elevate your content with professional-quality video, audio, and lighting.
Read More
black remote control on red table

Squarespace Just Doesn’t Cut it Anymore.

Explore the transition from Squarespace to WordPress for a more customized web development experience. Discover how pairing WordPress with robust hosting like Kinsta or SiteGround can elevate your online presence. Dive into ThemeForest for unique themes to add a personal touch to your digital realm.
Read More
Total
0
Share