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(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) We've seen a lot of great deals and sales on SSDs in recent months; however, larger forces, like tariffs and geopolitical issues, threaten to push prices higher in the coming months. In fact, it appears that shortages driven by AI data centers could persist for the coming decade. That means prices will go up significantly in the near future. However, now it's Black Friday, and time to find that winning SSD deal.
Luckily, for now, there are significant discounts available on 4TB and 8TB SSD models, which continue to offer prices of 5 cents per GB on the best-value drives and 6 cents per GB for a more premium 8TB drive.
Below, we list all the current 4TB and 8TB PCIe 4 and PCIe 5 SSDs we could find for sale, and we keep this list updated regularly. Many of these drives also make an appearance on our list of the Best SSDs, and you'll find plenty of other deals on smaller, more affordable SSDs in our Best SSD deals 2025 hub.
When buying an SSD, the drive you choose not to buy can be the most important decision you make — there's an entire constellation of subpar knock-offs that can and often do fail rather quickly, taking your data with them. You can rest assured that these SSDs on our list are worth buying – we don't list bargain-basement drives that could threaten the safety of your data: We select deals based on our in-depth knowledge, gained from years of thorough reviews, expansive benchmarks, and extensive historical price analysis.
You can peruse the list below and click on the bold blue price text in the table to see the deals:
What if you want to take the next step up? You can grab an 8TB SSD for as little as $0.06 per GB. The best choice here is the WD Black SN850X , a PCIe 4.0 drive that reads and writes at about 7,200 MB/s. That drive is one of the best of the bunch, and it's selling at an all-time low price.
If you can afford an 8TB drive, you'll be future-proofed for many years. However, 4TB is likely the sweet spot between price and capacity for most people. And, of course, if you have more than one M.2 slot, you can always buy two 4TB drives for less than the cost of one 8TB drive. But there's a convenience to having one massive drive that holds it all, especially for the PS5 or for a laptop, for instance.
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Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ssds/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ssds/best-4tb-and-8tb-ssd-deals-2025#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com
- PlayStation 5 consoles are $100 off for Black Friday — Digital Edition is $399, PS5 Pro is $649 at Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy
- Snapdragon X1 Elite Linux laptop cancelled due to performance concerns — Linux PC maker says Qualcomm CPU is ‘less suitable for Linux than expected’
- AMD ditches 'FidelityFX' in favor of apparently-meaningless 'FSR' branding, Fluid Motion Frames also renamed to FMF
- Microsoft unveils Azure Cobalt 200 CPU, in-house chip targets higher performance and deeper integration — Arm-based chip is equipped with 132 cores and manufact
- WWII Enigma machine sells for over half a million dollars at auction — one of the rare four-rotor 'M4' models
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.