The corrosion inhibition behavior of Menadione Sodium Bisulfite (MSB) in 1.0 M HCl medium was evaluated using weight loss, electrochemical techniques (Tafel polarisation and Electrochemical impedance spectra), surface analysis (SEM and EDX), Density Functional Theory (DFT), Noncovalent interaction- Reduced Density Gradient (NCI-RDG) and Monte Carlo (MC) simulation techniques. Weight loss measurement showed that as inhibitor concentration increased, the corrosion rate decreased which means that a protective film formed on the metal surface. At 300 ppm, the inhibitor showed a maximum inhibition efficiency of 89.7 %. Tafel polarisation studies indicate that the inhibitor is mixed-type in nature. The inhibitor adsorption on the mild steel is the best fit for the Langmuir isotherm model. As the weak interaction of sodium and oxygen in the inhibitor molecules, the inhibitor exhibits two distinct equilibrium behaviors. (i) inhibitor with sodium (solid-state) and inhibitor without sodium (in liquid-state). These two behaviors were theoretically investigated using DFT and MD simulation studies. The inhibitor and metal interaction is further supported using these theoretical studies. The electron population of the inhibitor was analyzed using molecular electrostatic potential, NCI-RDG, Fukui function, and natural bond orbital analysis. These studies further give an understating of the inhibitor and metal interactions.