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What Determines a Video's File Size? Bitrate, Resolution & FPS Basics

Last updated: June 12, 2026

“It's about the same length — so why is this video so huge?” A video's size comes down to a few factors working together. Once you understand them, you can cut size efficiently. This guide explains the four factors that determine a video's file size, in plain terms.

The four factors

Roughly speaking, video size is set by these four:

FactorWhat it isEffect on size
ResolutionPixel dimensions of the frame (e.g., 1080p)Bigger = heavier
BitrateAmount of data per secondHigher = heavier & sharper
LengthPlayback durationLonger = heavier
Frame rate (fps)Frames per secondHigher = heavier & smoother

Strictly, “bitrate × length” is the rough estimate of file size. Resolution and fps matter as factors that determine an appropriate bitrate.

A closer look at each

Resolution: the size of the picture

The bigger the frame — 4K (2160p), Full HD (1080p) — the more information needed, and the larger the file. If it's only watched on a phone or in chat, dropping to 720p or 480p barely changes the perceived look. Resolution has the biggest effect on size.

Bitrate: how “rich” the picture is

Bitrate is how much data is used per second. Higher means finer and smoother, but heavier. Too low and you get blocky artifacts, so balance it to the use case.

Frame rate: smoothness of motion

60fps is very smooth, but with twice the frames of 30fps it's also heavier. For talking-head or scenery clips without fast motion, 30fps is usually plenty.

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How to cut size efficiently

Once you know the mechanics, the fixes follow. Try them in order of impact:

  1. Lower the resolution (e.g., 1080p → 720p). Biggest effect.
  2. Cut out unneeded parts to shorten it (reduce length).
  3. Lower the bitrate (watching the quality balance).
  4. If needed, lower the fps (60fps → 30fps).

Our compression tool adjusts all of this — just pick a resolution and quality. Your video isn't uploaded; it's processed in your browser.

▶ Open the video compression tool

💡 Rule of thumb: if you just want it lighter, lower the resolution first, then shorten the length. Those two alone change the size dramatically.

Estimate: how big is a 1-minute video?

As a rough guide, if you know the bitrate you can estimate the size: “size (MB) ≈ bitrate (Mbps) × length (sec) ÷ 8.” For example, 8 Mbps for one minute (60 sec) is 8×60÷8 ≈ 60MB. The reason a high-quality phone clip can reach hundreds of MB in seconds is its high bitrate. Halve the bitrate and the size roughly halves too — which is exactly why lowering resolution or bitrate during compression shrinks the file. Work backward from the size limit of wherever you're sending it, and you can hit just the right size with no waste.

FAQ

Q. Can I reduce size while keeping quality?
A. To a degree, yes. Dropping the resolution one step or cutting wasted length reduces size while keeping the perceived quality.
Q. What bitrate should I use?
A. It depends on use. Start from the “standard” setting, raise it if quality feels lacking, lower it if you need a smaller file.
Q. Is my video uploaded?
A. No — our tools process everything in your browser.

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