Storage
Fast, reliable storage keeps your OS snappy, games loading quickly, and files safe. Browse NVMe SSDs, SATA SSDs, and HDDs across all capacities — from compact 500 GB drives to multi-terabyte arrays for media and backups. Compare sequential read/write speeds, endurance ratings, and form factors to build the ideal storage tier for your use case. Our PC for Video Editing Under $1500 guide walks through balancing speed and capacity effectively.
Storage
Showing 20 of 6,639 products
ADATA
ADATA XPG GAMMIX S7 2 TB
$402.02
Seagate
Seagate Constellation ES.3 4 TB
$180.00
Seagate
Seagate BarraCuda 3 TB
$145.00
Axiom
Axiom 0A89478-AX 3 TB
$212.84
Toshiba
Toshiba N300 8 TB
$489.34
Patriot
Patriot P400 V4 4 TB
$596.84
Seagate
Seagate IronWolf Pro 6 TB
$474.45
OCZ
OCZ Vertex 2 120 GB
$200.00
Axiom
Axiom Signature III 240 GB
$82.00
Patriot
Patriot Pyro SE 240 GB
$360.00
Western Digital
Western Digital Red Plus 14 TB
$399.99
TEAMGROUP
TEAMGROUP T-Force Cardea A440 Pro Special Series 1 TB
$204.99
Inland
Inland TN470 2 TB
$309.99
Crucial
Crucial P5 Plus 1 TB
$169.61
Seagate
Seagate Exos 7E8 512e 6 TB
$297.00
Seagate
Seagate Enterprise Performance 1.2 TB
$269.00
Hitachi
Hitachi Ultrastar He10 10 TB
$434.45
Intel
Intel 320 40 GB
$99.00
Inland
Inland Gaming Performance Plus 8 TB
$1499.99
Seagate
Seagate ST500LT032 500 GB
$68.16
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Frequently Asked Questions
- NVMe SSD vs SATA SSD — which should I choose?
- NVMe SSDs (M.2 PCIe) are significantly faster than SATA SSDs, with sequential read speeds of 3,000–7,000 MB/s versus 500–600 MB/s for SATA. For your primary OS and game drive, NVMe is recommended. SATA SSDs are a cost-effective choice for secondary storage.
- How much storage do I need for gaming?
- A 1 TB NVMe SSD is a practical starting point for most gamers, holding the OS plus 8–15 large modern titles. If you have a large game library, consider 2 TB or add a secondary HDD for long-term storage.
- Do I need an HDD if I have an SSD?
- Not required, but an HDD is a cost-effective way to add bulk storage for media, backups, and games you play infrequently. A 2–4 TB HDD paired with a 1 TB NVMe SSD is a popular combination for value-focused builds.
- What is PCIe Gen 4 vs Gen 5 for SSDs?
- PCIe Gen 5 SSDs reach sequential speeds above 10,000 MB/s, roughly double Gen 4. Real-world gains in gaming are currently minimal, but Gen 5 benefits demanding workloads like large file transfers or video editing. Gen 4 SSDs remain the price-performance sweet spot for most users.
- Does SSD brand matter?
- Reputable brands like Samsung, WD, Seagate, and Crucial have strong reliability track records. Look for drives with at least 600 TBW endurance rating for your capacity tier and check for a DRAM cache if peak sustained write speeds matter for your workload.