Enterprise Hardware · Storage

SSD vs. HDD on the Secondary Market: Pricing, Demand, and What’s Actually Moving in 2026

Standard Mobile Company ResearchApril 13, 20268 min read

Enterprise storage is one of the most actively traded categories in the secondary hardware market. Every data center decommission, every server refresh, and every ITAD engagement produces drives—often thousands of them. But SSDs and HDDs occupy fundamentally different positions on the secondary market, with different pricing dynamics, different buyer profiles, and very different outlooks.

Understanding which drives have value, which are moving quickly, and which are headed for the shredder is essential for anyone buying, selling, or processing enterprise storage in 2026.

The Market Split: SSDs Are Growing, HDDs Are Shrinking

The secondary market for enterprise storage mirrors the primary market with a lag. As new server deployments have shifted heavily toward NVMe and SAS SSDs over the past five years, the used market is now seeing a corresponding surge in SSD availability. Meanwhile, HDD supply on the secondary market remains massive—decades of spinning disk deployments continue to produce decommission volume—but demand is concentrating in fewer use cases.

42%
Price decline in used enterprise SSDs over the past 12 months, driven by NAND oversupply and decommission volume

Enterprise SSD Pricing: Current Market

Used enterprise SSD pricing has fallen significantly over the past year. NAND flash oversupply in the primary market has compressed new SSD pricing, which in turn puts downward pressure on secondary-market values. Simultaneously, accelerating data center refresh cycles are pushing more used SSDs onto the market.

Drive TypeCapacityNew Price (Approx.)Used Price (Secondary, 2026)Used % of New
Samsung PM893 (SATA SSD)960 GB$105$35–$5033–48%
Samsung PM893 (SATA SSD)3.84 TB$280$110–$15039–54%
Samsung PM9A3 (NVMe U.2)1.92 TB$220$80–$11536–52%
Samsung PM9A3 (NVMe U.2)3.84 TB$390$160–$22041–56%
Intel D7-P5520 (NVMe U.2)3.84 TB$410$150–$21037–51%
Micron 7450 PRO (NVMe U.2)1.92 TB$200$70–$10035–50%
Kioxia PM6 (SAS SSD)1.92 TB$320$100–$14531–45%

What Drives SSD Pricing

Enterprise HDD Pricing: The Commodity Floor

Used enterprise HDDs have become one of the most price-depressed categories in the secondary market. The combination of massive supply from ongoing decommissions and shrinking demand as workloads migrate to SSD has pushed prices to levels that challenge the economics of even handling them.

Drive TypeCapacityUsed Price (Secondary, 2026)Demand Level
SAS 10K RPM (2.5″)300 GB$3–$6Very Low
SAS 10K RPM (2.5″)600 GB$5–$10Low
SAS 10K RPM (2.5″)1.2 TB$8–$15Low–Moderate
SAS 12G NL 7.2K (3.5″)4 TB$8–$14Moderate
SAS 12G NL 7.2K (3.5″)8 TB$14–$22Moderate
SAS 12G NL 7.2K (3.5″)12 TB$20–$32Moderate–High
SATA 7.2K (3.5″)14 TB$22–$35Moderate–High
SATA 7.2K (3.5″)16–18 TB$30–$50High
A 300 GB SAS 10K drive that sold for $180 new in 2018 is worth $3–$6 today. At that price point, the handling, testing, and shipping cost often exceeds the sale price. These are recycling candidates, not resale candidates.

Where HDD Demand Still Exists

Not all HDD demand has evaporated. Specific use cases sustain pricing for certain drive categories:

The Data Destruction Variable

One factor that uniquely affects storage drives on the secondary market: data destruction requirements. Unlike RAM, CPUs, or networking equipment, storage drives contain customer data that must be sanitized before resale.

For SSDs, NIST 800-88 compliant data destruction means either cryptographic erase (if the drive supports SED/OPAL) or a full-drive overwrite. Both preserve the drive for resale. For HDDs, overwrite methods work for most compliance requirements, though some regulated industries (healthcare, finance, government) may require physical destruction regardless.

The cost of data sanitization ($2–$5 per drive at scale) is negligible for high-value SSDs but can represent 20–50% of the resale value for low-value HDDs. This further compresses HDD margins and pushes more low-capacity HDDs toward destruction rather than resale.

The Seller’s Decision: What to Sell, What to Scrap

For ITAD providers, brokers, and enterprises disposing of storage, the practical decision tree is:

Outlook: Where Storage Pricing Goes From Here

SSDs: Prices Find a Floor

The NAND oversupply that drove SSD prices down throughout 2025 is beginning to correct as manufacturers cut production. New enterprise SSD pricing is expected to stabilize or rise modestly through late 2026. On the secondary market, this means used SSD pricing will also firm up. The current moment—spring 2026—is likely near the bottom for used enterprise SSD pricing. Buyers should be acquiring now.

HDDs: Terminal Decline for Most Categories

Sub-8 TB enterprise HDDs will continue their pricing decline toward zero resale value. The only HDD category with staying power is high-capacity (12 TB+) drives, which benefit from the simple math that bulk storage still costs less per terabyte on spinning disk than flash. As 20+ TB drives become common in decommissions over the next two years, the value floor for mid-capacity HDDs will drop further.

The secondary storage market in 2026 is an SSD story. The margins are there, the demand is there, and the supply is growing. HDDs are a handling problem more than a revenue opportunity for most of the market. Sellers who can efficiently sort, test, and route storage drives to the right channels will capture the value. Everyone else will end up paying to shred drives that someone would have bought.

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