Top-end SSDs have gotten so pricey they're worth more than their weight in gold
And the price hike pain won't likely end here
· TechRadarNews By Darren Allan published 16 January 2026
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- SSDs have shot up in price over the past month and a half
- Tom's Hardware compared the cost of some top-end SSDs against gold in terms of their relative weight
- It turns out that high-end 8TB SSDs are, on average, worth more than gold now by weight – and a few 4TB models are, too
If you've ever wondered whether SSDs are more valuable than gold, gram-for-gram, in weight terms – and some folks have, following price inflation driven by the memory crisis – the answer is, rather incredibly, yes, for capacious high-end drives, anyway.
Tom's Hardware reports that a Reddit discussion sprang up around this topic, and our sister site ran some comparisons of the relative cost-to-weight ratios of 24k gold versus certain NVMe SSD models.
Those are the compact stick-style SSDs, of course, that plug into your motherboard via an M.2 slot. (It's worth noting that SATA SSDs, which are much slower than NVMe drives, are in danger of having the plug pulled by a major manufacturer, Samsung, as you may have seen recently.)
To work this out, Tom's collated a list of SSDs (over 100) from major US retailers (Newegg, Microcenter, Best Buy, and Walmart), which were all PCIe 4 or 5 models with at least 4TB capacity (and currently in stock). These were all consumer models, with pricey enterprise drives (laden with a bunch of extra bells and whistles), not considered as they'd throw out the overall value equation.
And obviously, no SSD with a heatsink was included as that ramps up the weight a lot (which averaged around 8 grams for 4TB models, and only slightly more at 8.2 grams for 8TB drives).
With the 8TB models, Tom's worked out that the average price is now $1,476 with their sample. And the price of 8.2 grams of gold? That's about $1,200, based on a price of $148 per gram at the time of compiling the comparison.
So, these top-end SSDs are more than worth their weight in gold, quite literally.
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