Best helium-filled NAS hard drives
Helium-filled drives seal thinner platters in a lighter internal atmosphere: less drag, so they run cooler, quieter and use less power than an air drive of the same size - and the saved space lets makers pack in more platters for higher capacity. Every model here is helium, CMR and in current production, ranked by measured failure rate.
| Drive | Capacity | Tech | Class | Interface | AFR | €/TB | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
ST16000NM000J
Seagate Exos X18
|
16 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.22% | €27.49 | €440 |
| 2 |
WUH722626ALE6L4
WD Ultrastar DC HC590
|
26 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.40% | €41.42 | €1,077 |
| 3 |
WUH722222ALE6L4
WD Ultrastar DC HC570
|
22 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.47% | €51.11 | €1,124 |
| 4 |
ST16000NM001G
Seagate Exos X16
|
16 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.54% | €31.16 | €499 |
| 5 |
MG10ACA20TE
Toshiba MG10
|
20 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.59% | €43.30 | €866 |
| 6 |
MG11ACA24TE
Toshiba MG11
|
24 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.68% | €42.38 | €1,017 |
| 7 |
WUH721816ALE6Lx
WD Ultrastar DC HC550
|
16 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.80% | €41.25 | €660 |
| 8 |
WUH721414ALE6L4
WD Ultrastar DC HC530
|
14 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.81% | - | - |
| 9 |
ST12000NM001G
Seagate Exos X16
|
12 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 0.96% | €36.77 | €441 |
| 10 |
MG07ACA14TE
Toshiba MG07
|
14 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 1.18% | - | - |
| 11 |
ST14000NM001G
Seagate Exos X16
|
14 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 1.35% | €32.14 | €450 |
| 12 |
MG08ACA16Tx
Toshiba MG08
|
16 TB | CMR | Enterprise | SATA | 1.48% | €27.49 | €440 |
Ranked by measured failure rate (Backblaze AFR). $/TB shows once live prices are wired.
Why helium matters above 12TB
Helium is standard from 12TB up: it's the only way to fit seven, nine or ten platters in a 3.5-inch case while keeping power and heat in check. For a multi-bay NAS that runs 24/7, the lower draw and cooler running add up across the array.
It is not a reliability shortcut on its own - rank by failure rate first, then weigh price per TB. The capacity and efficiency are the win; the drive still has to be a low-AFR CMR model to be worth buying.
Frequently asked questions
- Is a helium hard drive better than an air-filled one?
- At high capacities, yes. Helium is far less dense than air, so the platters spin with less drag - that cuts power draw, heat and noise, and lets manufacturers stack more platters. Effectively every drive above 12TB is helium, because air-filled designs can't reach those capacities reliably.
- What happens if the helium leaks out?
- Modern helium drives are hermetically sealed and report internal helium pressure over SMART, so a slow leak shows up long before failure. Large-scale Backblaze data puts their failure rates in line with - often better than - comparable air drives.