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

SATA SSDs, ranked by cost per terabyte

Solid-state speed without the NVMe premium. Compare every 2.5" and M.2 SATA SSD we track, sorted by real $/TB.

Live data · updated dailyNew & recertifiedRanked by real cost per terabyte
What this is & who it's for

A SATA SSD stores data on flash memory rather than spinning platters, eliminating mechanical latency and delivering instant boot times, snappy application loads and silent, shock-proof operation. It uses the same SATA interface and 2.5-inch (or M.2) form factor as older drives, so it drops straight into almost any laptop or desktop built in the last fifteen years — making it the single best upgrade for an ageing machine. The trade-off versus NVMe is sequential speed: SATA tops out around 550 MB/s, a hard ceiling set by the interface, whereas NVMe runs many times faster.

For most people that ceiling is invisible in daily use — the jump from a hard drive to any SSD is night and day, while the jump from SATA SSD to NVMe is only noticeable in large file transfers and heavy workloads. SATA SSDs cost markedly more per terabyte than hard drives but are usually the cheapest solid-state option, which makes them ideal for boot drives, game libraries and giving an old laptop a second life. When comparing value, weigh capacity, DRAM cache presence, NAND type (TLC is the durable mainstream choice) and the drive’s endurance rating in TBW. Used SATA SSDs exist but check remaining write endurance carefully.

Live catalog · sorted by $/TB

Browse SATA SSDs by value

Every SATA SSD we track, filtered by capacity, condition and brand, sorted cheapest-per-terabyte first.

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SATA SSD vs NVMe SSD — which do you actually need?

Both are solid-state, but they use different interfaces. SATA reuses the old hard-drive bus and caps at roughly 550 MB/s; NVMe runs over PCIe lanes and reaches many gigabytes per second. The right choice depends on your machine and workload.

SATA SSD versus NVMe at a glance
AttributeSATA SSDNVMe SSD
InterfaceSATA III (6 Gb/s)PCIe (Gen 3/4/5)
Real-world sequential speed~550 MB/s1,500–12,000 MB/s
Form factors2.5" and M.2 (SATA key)M.2 (PCIe key), some U.2
Best forOld PCs, boot drives, game storageOS, editing, databases, fast scratch
Relative $/TBUsually lowerOften comparable now

Check what your motherboard or laptop accepts: an M.2 slot may be SATA-only, NVMe-only or both, and the two M.2 keyings are not interchangeable in performance. If your machine supports NVMe and the price gap is small, NVMe is the better buy — see NVMe vs SATA.

Before you buy

SATA SSDs — questions answered

Is a SATA SSD fast enough, or should I get NVMe?+
For booting, launching apps, browsing and gaming, a SATA SSD feels effectively instant — the difference from a hard drive is dramatic. NVMe only pulls ahead in large sequential transfers and professional workloads. If your machine only takes SATA, or the NVMe price premium is significant, a SATA SSD is an excellent choice.
What does TBW mean and should I worry about it?+
TBW (terabytes written) is the manufacturer’s endurance rating — how much data you can write over the drive’s warranty. Typical consumer drives are rated for hundreds of TBW, far more than most users write in years. It only becomes a real concern for write-heavy servers or caching roles. Our SSD endurance guide explains it fully.
Can I replace my laptop hard drive with a SATA SSD myself?+
In most laptops with a 2.5-inch bay or an M.2 slot, yes — it’s one of the easiest and most impactful upgrades you can do. Clone or fresh-install your OS onto the new drive, swap it in, and the machine will feel years younger. Always back up first.
Are cheap DRAM-less SSDs worth buying?+
DRAM-less drives cut cost by omitting the cache chip and using a slice of system memory or NAND instead. They’re fine for light, read-mostly use and secondary storage, but sustained-write performance and consistency suffer. For a primary boot drive, a model with DRAM and TLC NAND is the safer value.

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