Kingston storage, ranked by cost per terabyte
A budget-friendly memory and flash specialist with a foot in every category. Compare every Kingston product we track, sorted by real $/TB.
Kingston is one of the largest independent memory and flash makers, and its appeal is straightforward: value across the board. On storage, the A400 and NV-series SSDs are dependable budget upgrades, while DataTraveler USB flash drives and Canvas memory cards cover everyday transfers and camera use. Its biggest presence, though, is in memory: the ValueRAM and FURY lines span DDR4 and DDR5 for desktops, laptops and gaming builds.
On the value scale, Kingston positions itself as the sensible budget option rather than the performance flagship. Its SSDs and flash rarely top the speed charts, but they land at low, accessible prices that make them easy recommendations for first upgrades, secondary storage and parts-bin builds. For solid-state, that means competitive — if not category-leading — cost per terabyte; for memory, a reliable, well-priced choice when you just need working RAM that runs. As with all flash storage, the lowest absolute $/TB still belongs to hard drives. Compare the live, Kingston-filtered catalog below, sorted cheapest-per-terabyte first.
Every Kingston product we track, by value
Filtered to Kingston and sorted cheapest-per-terabyte first — the current best-value pick is highlighted automatically. Filter by capacity and condition, then jump straight to a live offer.
Kingston — questions answered
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