A group of seven companies began the development of USB in 1995:
Compaq,
DEC,
IBM,
Intel,
Microsoft,
NEC, and
Nortel. The goal was to make it fundamentally easier to connect external devices to PCs by replacing the multitude of connectors at the back of PCs, addressing the usability issues of existing interfaces, and simplifying software configuration of all devices connected to USB, as well as permitting greater data transfer rates for external devices and
plug and play features. Concepts of the 1979
Atari SIO serial bus, of the 8-bit Atari computers, and the 1980
IEEE-488 derived
Commodore bus, and Hewlett Packard's
HP-IL bus pioneered this approach. A consortium led by Apple, and containing Sony, Panasonic (Matsushita), LG, Toshiba, Hitachi, Cannon, Philips Electronics, Compaq, Thomson and Texas Instruments, would develop the concept further, from 1986, as the
IEEE 1394 firewire standard and patent pool.
Joseph C. Decuir, originally of Atari, then Commodore, and a designer of the Atari SIO common bus, would work on the USB project for Microsoft, obtaining one of the related US patents.
Ajay Bhatt and his team worked on the standard at Intel; the first
integrated circuits supporting USB were produced by Intel in 1995.
USB 1.x Released in January 1996, USB 1.0 specified signaling rates of 1.5 Mbit/s (
Low Bandwidth or
Low Speed) and 12 Mbit/s (
Full Speed). It did not allow for extension cables, due to timing and power limitations. Few USB devices made it to the market until USB 1.1 was released in August 1998. USB 1.1 was the earliest revision that was widely adopted and led to what Microsoft designated the "
Legacy-free PC". Neither USB 1.0 nor 1.1 specified a design for any connector smaller than the standard type A or type B. Though many designs for a miniaturized type B connector appeared on many peripherals, conformity to the USB 1.
x standard was hampered by treating peripherals that had miniature connectors as though they had a tethered connection (that is: no plug or receptacle at the peripheral end). There was no known miniature type A connector until USB 2.0 (revision 1.01) introduced one.
USB 2.0 USB 2.0 was released in April 2000, adding a higher maximum signaling rate of 480 Mbit/s (maximum theoretical data throughput 53 MByte/s) named
High Speed or
High Bandwidth, in addition to the USB 1.
x Full Speed signaling rate of 12 Mbit/s (maximum theoretical data throughput 1.2 MByte/s). Modifications to the USB specification have been made via
engineering change notices (ECNs). The most important of these ECNs are included into the USB 2.0 specification package available from USB.org: •
Mini-A and Mini-B Connector •
Micro-USB Cables and Connectors Specification 1.01 •
InterChip USB Supplement •
On-The-Go Supplement 1.3 USB On-The-Go makes it possible for two USB devices to communicate with each other without requiring a separate USB host •
Battery Charging Specification 1.1 Added support for dedicated chargers, host chargers behavior for devices with dead batteries •
Battery Charging Specification 1.2: with increased current of 1.5 A on charging ports for unconfigured devices, allowing high-speed communication while having a current up to 1.5 A •
Link Power Management Addendum ECN, which adds a
sleep power state
USB 3.x The USB 3.0 specification was released on 12 November 2008, with its management transferring from USB 3.0 Promoter Group to the USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF) and announced on 17 November 2008 at the SuperSpeed USB Developers Conference. USB 3.0 adds a new architecture and protocol named
SuperSpeed, with associated
backward-compatible plugs, receptacles, and cables. SuperSpeed plugs and receptacles are identified with a distinct logo and blue inserts in standard format receptacles. The SuperSpeed architecture provides for an operation mode at a rate of 5.0 Gbit/s, in addition to the three existing operation modes. Its efficiency is dependent on a number of factors including physical symbol encoding and link-level overhead. At a 5 Gbit/s signaling rate with
8b/10b encoding, each byte needs 10 bits to transmit, so the raw throughput is 500 MB/s. When flow control, packet framing and protocol overhead are considered, it is realistic for about two-thirds of the raw throughput, or 330 MB/s to transmit to an application. Low-power and high-power devices remain operational with this standard, but devices implementing SuperSpeed can provide an increased current of between 150 mA and 900 mA, by discrete steps of 150 mA. preserves existing
SuperSpeed and
SuperSpeedPlus architectures and protocols and their respective operation modes, but introduces two additional
SuperSpeedPlus operation modes (
USB 3.2 Gen 1×2 and
USB 3.2 Gen 2×2) with signaling rates of 10 and 20 Gbit/s (raw data rates of 1212 and 2424 MB/s), respectively. The increased bandwidth is a result of two-lane operation over the additional wires included in all Full-Featured USB‑C Fabrics (all involved devices, hubs, cables and host).
Naming scheme Starting with the USB 3.2 specification, USB-IF introduced a new naming scheme. To help companies with the branding of the different operation modes, USB-IF recommended branding the 5, 10, and 20 Gbit/s capabilities as
SuperSpeed USB 5Gbps,
SuperSpeed USB 10Gbps, and
SuperSpeed USB 20Gbps, respectively. In 2023, they were replaced again, removing
"SuperSpeed", with
USB 5Gbps,
USB 10Gbps, and
USB 20Gbps. With new
Packaging and
Port logos.
USB4 The
USB4 specification (Version 1.0) was released on 29 August 2019. It is based on the
Thunderbolt 3 protocol, defines 20 and 40 Gbit/s modes over
USB-C, and allows tunneling of
USB 3.2,
USB 2.0,
PCIe and
DisplayPort protocols; Thunderbolt 3 compatibility is optional for USB4 hosts/devices.
USB4 Version 2.0 (announced 1 September 2022) adds a new physical layer and higher data rates: up to
80 Gbit/s bidirectional, and an asymmetric mode supporting
120/40 Gbit/s (host→device / device→host) for video-heavy use cases. It achieves this using
PAM3 signaling and, in many cases, existing passive “40 Gbit/s” USB-C cables; a new 80 Gbit/s active cable category is also defined. Version 2.0 updates tunneling to align with
DisplayPort 2.1 and
PCIe 4.0, and maintains backward compatibility with USB4 1.0, USB 3.2/2.0, and Thunderbolt 3. Since 2023, the USB-IF recommends consumer-facing product names that reflect link speed (e.g.,
USB 40Gbps,
USB 80Gbps), replacing “USB4 v1/v2” in marketing and certification listings.
September 2022 naming scheme Because of the previous confusing naming schemes, USB-IF decided to change it once again. As of 2 September 2022, marketing names follow the syntax "USB
xGbps", where
x is the speed of transfer in Gbit/s. Overview of the updated names and logos can be seen in the adjacent table. The operation modes USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 and USB4 Gen 2×2 – or: USB 3.2 Gen 2×1 and USB4 Gen 2×1 – are not interchangeable or compatible; all participating controllers must operate with the same mode.
Version histories Specification history Power-related standards history == System design ==