The enterprise SSD market is experiencing a pricing correction that is reverberating through the entire secondary hardware channel. NAND flash production capacity that was expanded aggressively during the 2021–2022 shortage has collided with softening demand growth, creating a supply glut that has driven enterprise SSD prices down 35–50% from their 2023 peaks.
For buyers of used enterprise storage, this is both an opportunity and a challenge. The opportunity: enterprise-grade NVMe SSDs are available at prices that were unimaginable two years ago. The challenge: when new drives are cheap, the value proposition of used drives narrows—and secondary-market pricing has to adjust accordingly.
The NAND flash market operates on a well-documented boom-bust cycle. Shortage periods drive investment in new fabrication capacity. By the time that capacity comes online, demand has moderated, creating oversupply and price declines. The current cycle is particularly pronounced:
2021–2022: Global chip shortages and pandemic-driven demand spikes push NAND flash spot prices to multi-year highs. Enterprise SSD lead times stretch to 26–52 weeks. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron announce massive fab expansions. Secondary-market prices for used enterprise SSDs surge as buyers scramble for any available inventory.
2023: New fab capacity begins coming online. Demand growth slows as cloud providers digest existing inventory and enterprise IT spending tightens. NAND spot prices begin declining. Samsung and SK Hynix announce production cuts to stabilize pricing, but the cuts are insufficient to absorb the new capacity.
2024–2025: Full-scale price correction. 176-layer and 232-layer TLC NAND reaches cost parity with previous-generation QLC at higher density. Enterprise SSD pricing drops 15–25% year-over-year. New-drive pricing compresses margins on used-drive resale for the first time in the NAND cycle.
2026: The oversupply persists. Samsung’s P-channel V-NAND and SK Hynix’s 321-layer NAND have pushed cost-per-terabyte to new lows. Enterprise buyers who were paying $150/TB for NVMe SSDs in 2023 are now paying $65–$85/TB new. The secondary market has had to re-price every category.
| Drive | Capacity | New Price (Q1 2026) | Secondary Market | Secondary Discount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung PM9A3 | 3.84 TB | $310–$360 | $140–$190 | 45–55% |
| Samsung PM9A3 | 7.68 TB | $580–$680 | $260–$340 | 50–55% |
| Micron 7450 Pro | 3.84 TB | $280–$330 | $120–$170 | 48–57% |
| Intel D7-P5620 (Solidigm) | 3.84 TB | $340–$400 | $150–$210 | 48–56% |
| Kioxia CM7-R | 3.84 TB | $350–$420 | $160–$220 | 48–54% |
| Samsung PM1733 | 3.84 TB | $240–$290 | $95–$140 | 52–60% |
The secondary-market discount on enterprise SSDs has widened from a historical average of 35–40% to 45–60%. This is a direct consequence of falling new-drive prices: when a new PM9A3 costs $320, a used one has to be priced well below $200 to justify the risk premium that comes with used storage.
Enterprise SSDs have a finite write endurance measured in DWPD (Drive Writes Per Day) over a warranty period, typically 5 years. A 3 DWPD drive rated for 5 years can sustain 3 complete drive writes every day for 1,825 days. The total bytes written (TBW) is the hard number that matters.
On the secondary market, remaining endurance is the single most important variable in pricing. Two identical drives with different usage histories are fundamentally different products:
| Metric | Lightly Used Drive | Heavily Used Drive |
|---|---|---|
| SMART health indicator | 95–100% | 60–80% |
| Percentage of rated TBW consumed | < 10% | 40–60% |
| Typical source | Read-heavy workloads (CDN, caching) | Write-heavy workloads (databases, logging) |
| Secondary-market premium vs. baseline | +15–25% | −15–30% |
| Buyer confidence | High (years of useful life remaining) | Moderate (adequate for specific use cases) |
Drives pulled from read-heavy environments (content delivery networks, caching layers, data lakes) often have consumed less than 5% of their rated TBW after 3–4 years of service. These drives are functionally indistinguishable from new and command premium pricing on the secondary market. Drives from write-intensive database environments may have consumed 40–60% of their TBW in the same period and are priced accordingly.
An enterprise SSD is not “used” in the same way a car is used. A drive with 95% remaining endurance from a CDN environment is, for all practical purposes, a new drive at half the price.
The current wave of enterprise SSD supply on the secondary market is coming from three primary sources:
Hyperscale cloud providers (AWS, Azure, GCP) replace storage infrastructure on 3–5 year cycles regardless of drive health. When a storage node is refreshed, hundreds or thousands of drives are decommissioned simultaneously. These drives typically have low usage (10–20% of rated TBW consumed) because cloud storage workloads are distributed across massive arrays that keep per-drive utilization low.
Data centers converting CPU-based compute racks to GPU clusters are removing existing storage along with the servers. The storage is often perfectly functional and relatively new—it is simply not needed in the GPU-optimized configuration that replaces it. This supply source is growing rapidly as AI infrastructure buildout accelerates.
The transition from PCIe Gen 3/Gen 4 NVMe SSDs to Gen 5 drives is creating a migration-driven supply wave. Enterprises upgrading to Gen 5 storage for bandwidth-intensive workloads are decommissioning Gen 4 drives that still have 80–90% of their useful life remaining. For workloads that do not need Gen 5 bandwidth (the majority of enterprise storage use cases), these Gen 4 drives offer exceptional value.
For secondary-market buyers, the current oversupply environment requires an adjusted approach:
For sellers and ITAD providers holding enterprise SSD inventory, the current environment demands speed over patience:
The NAND flash cycle will eventually turn. New fab construction has slowed, and AI-driven storage demand is accelerating. But that rebalancing is 12–18 months away at minimum. For now, the secondary market for enterprise SSDs is a buyer’s market—and the smart money is acting accordingly.
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