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Microseconds to Nanoseconds (µs to ns) Converter

1 µs = 1,000 ns

1 Microsecond equals 1,000 Nanoseconds (1 µs = 1,000 ns). Convert Microseconds to Nanoseconds with formula, table, and examples.

One microsecond equals exactly 1,000 nanoseconds. To convert microseconds to nanoseconds, simply multiply by 1,000. This is the reverse of dividing by 1,000 to go the other direction, and it is one of the simplest unit conversions in electronics because both units are decimal powers of the second. This direction of conversion — from microseconds to nanoseconds — is most useful when you need higher precision than microseconds provide, or when comparing a device-level timing value (expressed in microseconds) to a processor-level timing value (expressed in nanoseconds). For example, a radar pulse repetition interval of 100 µs becomes 100,000 ns, which can then be directly compared to the nanosecond-level pulse widths in the same system. Software profilers, oscilloscope readings, and datasheet timing diagrams frequently mix nanosecond and microsecond values. Converting everything to nanoseconds is a common approach when performing detailed timing analysis, since it avoids decimal fractions and keeps all values as whole numbers for as long as possible. In scientific computing and simulation, time steps for numerical integration are often set in microseconds and then converted to nanoseconds when interfacing with hardware models or physics engines that operate at finer granularity.

How to Convert Microseconds to Nanoseconds

ns = µs × 1,000
Multiply the value in Microseconds by 1,000
  1. Take your value in Microseconds
  2. Multiply by 1,000
  3. Read the result in Nanoseconds

Common Microseconds to Nanoseconds Conversions

Microseconds (µs) Nanoseconds (ns) Status
0.001 µs 1 ns
0.01 µs 10 ns
0.1 µs 100 ns
0.5 µs 500 ns
1 µs 1,000 ns
5 µs 5,000 ns
10 µs 10,000 ns
50 µs 50,000 ns
100 µs 100,000 ns
250 µs 250,000 ns
500 µs 500,000 ns
1,000 µs 1,000,000 ns
5,000 µs 5,000,000 ns
10,000 µs 10,000,000 ns
100,000 µs 100,000,000 ns

Good to Know About Microseconds to Nanoseconds Conversion

The shift from microseconds to nanoseconds as the dominant unit of computing performance happened gradually between the 1970s and 1990s, tracking the exponential increase in processor speed. Early microprocessors like the Intel 8080 (1974) had cycle times of about 500 ns. By the mid-1990s, processors had broken the 10 ns barrier. Today, individual cycles are sub-nanosecond, though the broader system latencies — memory, buses, storage — remain in the nanosecond to microsecond range.

Microseconds to Nanoseconds: What You Need to Know

The microsecond-to-nanosecond conversion is particularly relevant in RF (radio frequency) engineering. Antenna designers work with wavelengths that correspond to nanosecond-scale periods, while system-level timing — guard intervals, switching times, propagation delays over cables — is specified in microseconds. A 1 µs guard interval corresponds to 1,000 ns, or a propagation distance of about 300 meters at the speed of light. In medical imaging, particularly MRI, the radio frequency pulses used to excite hydrogen nuclei last a few hundred microseconds, while the precession periods of individual protons that produce the signal are in the nanosecond range. Understanding the relationship between these timescales is fundamental to MRI pulse sequence design. In high-speed digital photography and flash photography, strobe durations range from a few microseconds for high-speed studio flashes down to tens of nanoseconds for specialized scientific strobes. Converting between the two units is routine when comparing different flash systems or calculating motion blur at a given shutter speed. For anyone working with microcontrollers and embedded systems, timers are often configured in microseconds at the application level but the underlying hardware timer registers count in units of the clock period, which is measured in nanoseconds. The conversion is a daily occurrence in firmware development.

What is a Microsecond? µs

One millionth of a second. Used in electronics, radar, radio transmission, and scientific instrumentation where milliseconds are too coarse.

Metric SI radar pulse timing radio wave transmission CPU cache latency
Learn more about Microsecond →

What is a Nanosecond? ns

One billionth of a second. The timescale at which modern computer processors and semiconductors operate, and at which light travels roughly 30 centimeters.

Metric SI CPU and memory clock cycles semiconductor circuit timing optical fiber communications
Learn more about Nanosecond →

Going the other way? Use our Nanoseconds to Microseconds converter.

Microseconds to Nanoseconds FAQ

  • There are exactly 1,000 nanoseconds in one microsecond. Since the microsecond is 10⁻⁶ seconds and the nanosecond is 10⁻⁹ seconds, the microsecond is one thousand times larger.

  • Multiply the number of microseconds by 1,000. For example, 2.5 µs × 1,000 = 2,500 ns. For 0.1 µs, the result is 100 ns.

  • Use nanoseconds when the value is smaller than about 0.1 microseconds, when you are comparing it to other values already expressed in nanoseconds, or when decimal fractions in microseconds would reduce clarity. For example, 0.005 µs is clearer as 5 ns.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Microseconds to Nanoseconds

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • 10 microseconds equals 10,000 nanoseconds. Sloths actually move at about 0.03 mph, or roughly one body length per 10 seconds — that's 10,000,000,000 nanoseconds per body length. In 10 microseconds, a sloth moves approximately 0.000000083 millimeters. The sloth is, as expected, unimpressed by this calculation.

  • Only if you are extraordinarily fast. Saying '1,000' takes about 0.3 seconds, which is 300,000 microseconds or 300,000,000 nanoseconds. So while you are announcing the result, approximately 300,000 more microseconds have elapsed. The conversion, however, is instantaneous.

  • It is named after the SI prefix nano, from the Greek nanos, meaning dwarf. So a nanosecond is literally a 'dwarf-second'. Computer pioneer Grace Hopper would probably appreciate the irony that these dwarf-seconds now govern everything from global financial markets to the GPS system telling you to turn left.

Need the reverse? Use our Nanoseconds to Microseconds converter. See all Time converters.