Cheapest 24TB Hard Drives — Live $/TB Prices

7 24TB drives tracked · prices updated every 2 hours · last checked
🏆 Cheapest 24TB drive right now
WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB
$16.63/TB
$399.00 total · Refurb · USB
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Top of the mainstream high-density tier. 24TB Seagate Exos X24 and WD Ultrastar HC580 represent current production-volume premium drives. Refurbished 24TB supply is limited because hyperscale deployments are still fresh.

All 24TB drives ranked by $/TB

#$/TBDriveInterfaceCondTotal
1$16.63WDElements Desktop 24TB USBUSBREFURB$399Buy
2$17.92WDUltrastar DC HC580 24TB RenewedSATA-6GREFURB$430Buy
3$18.33SeagateExos X24 24TB RenewedSATA-6GREFURB$440Buy
4$22.92WDElements Desktop 24TB USBUSBNew$550Buy
5$24.58SeagateExos X24 24TB RenewedSATA-6GNew$590Buy
6$25.00SeagateExos X24 24TB Enterprise SATASATA-6GNew$600Buy
7$28.75SeagateExos X24 24TB SATASATA-6GREFURB$690Buy

New vs refurbished at 24TB

At the 24TB capacity tier, the refurbished market typically prices 20-30% below new drive equivalents. Right now, the cheapest new 24TB drive is WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB at $22.92/TB and the cheapest refurbished is WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB at $16.63/TB — a 27% discount for refurb. For backup repositories, RAID 6 capacity tiers, and any deployment with redundancy, refurbished is the right answer. For primary production storage and single-drive deployments, the new drive premium buys peace of mind through full manufacturer warranty and zero accumulated wear.

Established refurbished resellers like MDD MaxDigitalData source from decommissioned hyperscale datacenters and provide 3-5 year reseller warranties at this capacity. Run smartctl on arrival, deploy in RAID 6 with at least one hot spare, and monitor SMART attributes continuously.

Best use cases for 24TB drives

Maximum-density new enterprise deployments. 24TB drives suit high-capacity NAS, large Plex libraries (1,000+ 4K films), and creative production environments with sustained high data ingest.

RAID guidance: RAID 6 with hot spare. Smaller vdev sizes (6-8 drives) reduce rebuild risk at this capacity. Use the RAID Capacity Planner to calculate exact usable capacity for any configuration at this capacity.

Power draw: 24TB enterprise SATA drives typically draw 6-9W active, 4-5W idle. Six 24TB drives in a NAS array consume approximately 35-55W active — modest by enterprise standards but meaningful for home electricity costs over years of operation.

When to size up: If your projected capacity growth over the next 24 months would exceed the array's usable capacity at 24TB drives, sizing up one tier (28TB or larger) defers the next expansion cycle and typically improves $/TB. Sizing up at this tier is usually justified for new deployments.

Is 24TB the right capacity for you?

24TB is the top of the mainstream high-density tier. Seagate Exos X24 and WD Ultrastar HC580 are the volume-production options. Refurbished 24TB supply is limited because the hyperscale deployments at this capacity are still in production. Appropriate for maximum-density new enterprise deployments, large Plex libraries (1,000+ 4K films), creative production environments with sustained high data ingest, and consolidation projects that reduce drive count to lower operational overhead.

How much can 24TB store?

Concrete capacity examples for a single 24TB drive, before RAID overhead and assuming typical file sizes:

Real-world usable capacity in a RAID 6 array is lower than the raw drive capacity — see the RAID section below for usable capacity examples at common drive counts.

24TB in a RAID array

Usable capacity examples for 24TB drives at common deployment sizes, using RAID 5 (single parity, one drive of overhead) and RAID 6 (dual parity, two drives of overhead):

DrivesRawRAID 5 usableRAID 6 usable
4 drives96TB72TB48TB
6 drives144TB120TB96TB
8 drives192TB168TB144TB
10 drives240TB216TB192TB
12 drives288TB264TB240TB

At 24TB per drive, single-parity RAID 5 is no longer safe in production. The probability of an unrecoverable read error during the long rebuild window from a 24TB failed drive is high enough that a second failure during rebuild becomes statistically likely. RAID 6 (dual parity) is mandatory at this capacity — the second parity drive absorbs URE-driven read failures during rebuild and prevents data loss.

Rebuild time for a 24TB drive in a RAID 6 array typically runs 72-120 hours at typical hardware-accelerated rebuild speeds (assuming the array is not heavily loaded with production traffic during rebuild). Throughout the rebuild window, the array operates at degraded performance and reduced redundancy. Hot spare drives that automatically begin rebuild on first failure shrink the exposure window to minutes rather than hours. Use the RAID Capacity Planner to model rebuild times for your specific drive count and array configuration.

Power and running cost of 24TB drives

Enterprise 24TB SATA hard drives typically draw 6-10W during active read/write and 4-5W at idle. For a 6-drive array running 24/7 with mixed activity, expect approximately 35-55W of continuous power draw plus the host system's overhead. At typical US residential electricity rates of $0.16/kWh, a 45W array costs about $63 per year in electricity; at commercial rates of $0.10/kWh, about $39 per year.

Fewer high-capacity drives dramatically reduce power consumption per terabyte stored. Six 24TB drives delivering 96TB usable in RAID 6 consume the same power as six 4TB drives delivering only 16TB usable — but at 600% of the capacity per watt. For datacenter and homelab deployments where electricity is a meaningful operating cost, sizing up to 24TB drives delivers better power efficiency per TB stored alongside the $/TB advantage. The TCO Calculator models the full 5-year power cost for any drive configuration.

24TB price history and 2026 trends

Enterprise hard drive prices have risen approximately 46-50% since September 2025, driven by AI infrastructure demand absorbing hyperscale HDD production, US import tariffs adding 10-13% to landed costs, and NAND shortages forcing buyers from SSD to HDD for capacity tiers. The 24TB capacity has been particularly affected because this tier is heavily consumed by hyperscale AI training storage — drives that previously sold in the spot market at competitive prices are now committed to hyperscale buyers. Read the full analysis in Hard Drive Prices Up 50% in 2026.

Most storage analysts expect elevated pricing to persist through 2026 and into 2027. New NAND capacity takes 2-3 years to qualify and ramp; hyperscale AI buildouts are not expected to moderate before late 2026. For 24TB buyers in particular, the practical procurement advice is to purchase current requirements at today's prices rather than deferring in anticipation of price normalization. Monitor live $/TB on this page and on the cheapest per TB tracker for the current best deal at this capacity.

Related capacities

22TB →20TB →18TB →30TB →All capacities →

Frequently asked questions

What's the cheapest 24TB hard drive?

As of the most recent refresh, the cheapest 24TB hard drive on DatacenterDisk is the WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB at $16.63/TB ($399.00 total). Prices update every 2 hours; check the live table above for the current winner.

Is 24TB enough storage for a Plex server?

24TB is enough for a serious Plex library: roughly 279 1080p films or 33 4K HDR films at typical sizes after RAID overhead. Most multi-drive Plex deployments use 24TB drives in RAID 6 for usable capacity in the 50-200TB range.

Are 24TB drives CMR or SMR?

All current 24TB enterprise and NAS-branded hard drives use Conventional Magnetic Recording (CMR) and are safe for RAID arrays. SMR is only found in some smaller capacity (≤8TB) consumer drives. Both Seagate Exos and WD Ultrastar at 24TB are CMR.

New or refurbished 24TB — which is better?

Cheapest new 24TB right now: WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB at $22.92/TB with full manufacturer warranty. Cheapest refurbished: WD Elements Desktop 24TB USB at $16.63/TB with reseller warranty. Refurbished is appropriate for RAID 6 backup and capacity tiers; new for primary production storage.

How much should a 24TB drive cost in 2026?

Live market shows 24TB drives starting at $16.63/TB ($399.00 total for the cheapest in-stock listing). For new enterprise CMR drives at this capacity, expect $22-25/TB depending on brand and series. The DatacenterDisk live tracker has the most current pricing.

What's the best 24TB drive for NAS?

For NAS deployments at 24TB, the best balance of $/TB and NAS-specific features comes from Seagate IronWolf, WD Red Plus, or Toshiba N300 (consumer NAS) and Seagate IronWolf Pro or WD Red Pro (business NAS). For maximum $/TB value in production deployments, Seagate Exos X24 and WD Ultrastar at 24TB are enterprise equivalents at lower cost.