PRICES TRACKED ACROSS 3,200 STORAGE PRODUCTS · UPDATED DAILY · LOWEST $/TB FIRST

Memory cards, ranked by cost per terabyte

Removable flash for cameras, drones, handhelds and phones. Compare microSD, SD, CF, CFexpress and CFast, sorted by real $/TB.

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What this is & who it's for

Memory cards put removable flash storage into cameras, drones, handheld consoles, dash cams and phones. The family spans tiny microSD cards in phones and the Nintendo Switch, full-size SD cards in most cameras, rugged CompactFlash in older professional bodies, and the newest high-bandwidth CFexpress and CFast cards that feed 8K video and rapid-fire bursts. They cost far more per terabyte than hard drives or even SSDs — you’re paying for miniaturisation, ruggedness and the speed ratings that prevent dropped frames — so cards are about capability in a slot, not bulk capacity value.

The number that trips people up is speed, not size. A card’s capacity is easy, but recording high-bitrate video or shooting continuous bursts demands a guaranteed minimum write speed, expressed through a confusing stack of ratings: Speed Class, UHS Speed Class (U1/U3), Video Speed Class (V30/V60/V90) and the bus markings (UHS-I, UHS-II). Buying a card whose sustained write speed is too low causes cameras to stutter or stop recording, regardless of how many gigabytes it holds. When comparing value, first match the card type and minimum speed your device requires, then optimise $/TB within that — and buy from reputable brands, as the memory-card market is plagued by counterfeits.

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Every memory card we track, filtered by type, capacity and brand, sorted cheapest-per-terabyte first.

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Card types and the speed-class maze

Capacity is the easy part; sustained write speed is what actually determines whether a card keeps up with your camera. Match the device’s required type and speed class first, then chase value.

Memory card types and speed ratings
TypeUsed inSpeed note
microSD (UHS-I)Phones, Switch, drones, dash camsV30 handles 4K; watch for fakes
SD / SDXC (UHS-I/II)Most camerasUHS-II needed for fast bursts & 6K+
CompactFlashOlder pro DSLRsLegacy; being replaced by CFexpress
CFexpress (Type A/B)Modern mirrorless, cinemaVery fast; 8K and high-speed bursts
CFastSome cinema camerasPro video; check exact card spec

Video Speed Class is the rating to trust for recording: V30 (30 MB/s) covers most 4K, V60 and V90 for high-bitrate and 8K. The headline ‘read’ speed on the label is not the same as the sustained write speed your camera needs. Photographers offloading cards in the field should also see our storage for creators guide.

Before you buy

Memory Cards — questions answered

Why do memory cards cost so much more per terabyte than SSDs?+
You’re paying for extreme miniaturisation, ruggedness, and certified sustained write speeds in a removable form — not for bulk capacity. A card has to survive being swapped, dropped and run hot in a camera while guaranteeing it won’t drop video frames. That engineering, plus smaller production scale, keeps $/TB well above internal flash.
Which speed rating actually matters for video?+
Video Speed Class (the V-number) is the one to trust, because it guarantees a sustained minimum write speed: V30 for most 4K, V60 and V90 for high-bitrate 4K, 6K and 8K. Ignore the big ‘read’ number on the front — recording is limited by sustained write speed, which the V-rating defines.
How do I avoid counterfeit memory cards?+
Buy from the manufacturer or a reputable seller, be suspicious of prices far below market, and test new cards with a capacity-verification tool before trusting them with data. Fakes often report a large size but fail or corrupt once you write past their true (much smaller) capacity.
Can I use a faster card than my device needs?+
Yes — a faster card works fine in a slower device, it just runs at the device’s maximum speed, so you don’t gain its full performance. There’s no harm in it, but there’s also no benefit in paying for a UHS-II or CFexpress card if your camera can’t use the extra bandwidth.

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