Best budget NAS hard drives
Drive Capacity Tech Class Interface AFR €/TB Price
1 ST22000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
22 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €34.55 €760
2 ST14000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
14 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €36.36 €509
3 ST20000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
20 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €36.50 €730
4 ST12000VN0008
Seagate IronWolf
12 TB CMR NAS SATA - €38.41 €461
5 ST18000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
18 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €38.89 €700
6 HDWG31G
Toshiba N300
14 TB CMR NAS SATA - €39.50 €553
7 ST12000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
12 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €39.87 €478
8 WD120EFBX
WD Red Plus
12 TB CMR NAS SATA - €41.00 €492
9 ST6000VN006
Seagate IronWolf
6 TB CMR NAS SATA - €41.65 €250
10 ST16000NT001
Seagate IronWolf Pro
16 TB CMR NAS-Pro SATA - €42.65 €682

Ranked by price per TB. $/TB shows once live prices are wired.

Getting the most terabytes per dollar

Compare $/TB, not the sticker

A 12TB drive can cost more than an 8TB and still be cheaper per terabyte - and per-terabyte is what counts for bulk storage. The table above sorts on exactly that, so the cheapest sticker price won't always sit at the top.

Don't trade reliability for a few dollars

The classic budget trap is an SMR drive or a bare desktop disk. Both are false economy in a NAS: desktop drives lack the error-recovery timing that keeps them in an array, and SMR drives can choke during a rebuild, right when you need them to hold. A drive that drops out and forces a resilver has already wiped out its savings in stress alone.

Mid-capacity is the value sweet spot

The newest, largest drives carry an early-adopter tax. Drop one or two tiers - think 8-14TB - and you usually land the best $/TB on a current, well-supported model that'll still get firmware updates for years.

Frequently asked questions

What's the cheapest safe NAS drive?
Look for the lowest price-per-terabyte among CMR, NAS-rated drives. Mid-capacity models (8-12TB) usually hit the best $/TB sweet spot, while the very largest drives carry a premium.
Are SMR drives cheaper?
Sometimes, but the savings aren't worth it for a NAS. SMR drives can stall under sustained writes and during RAID rebuilds. Stick to CMR even on a budget.
Is it cheaper to buy fewer large drives or more small ones?
Fewer larger drives are usually cheaper per terabyte and leave bays free for expansion, but they also mean a longer rebuild and more data at risk per drive. Balance $/TB against your redundancy plan.