If you’re looking for a network-attached storage (NAS) solution, you’ll want the right drive(s), the right technology and a clear understanding of how you’ll use it. Below we cover the drive-tech basics, then the top 10 picks, and finally how to pick depending on your scenario.
Drive Technology Basics: SMR vs CMR (and why it matters)
When buying drives for a NAS, the underlying technology of the hard drives inside the NAS is an often-overlooked but important factor. Two main types:
- CMR (Conventional Magnetic Recording): Also sometimes called PMR. Writes tracks independently. Better random write performance, better for frequent rewrites, rebuilds, multi-user/RAID environments.
- SMR (Shingled Magnetic Recording): Overlaps tracks like roof shingles; higher density (more TB per platter) and lower cost, but weaker performance under certain workloads (especially rewrites or RAID rebuilds).
Why it matters for NAS: If your NAS is going to be used for active file sharing, many users, RAID rebuilds, streaming + writing, you’re better off with CMR drives. If it’s largely archival (write once, read many) or you’re cost-sensitive and the workload is light, SMR might suffice.
Bottom line: For most home & small business NAS, prefer CMR-rated drives (or drive models specified as NAS/RAID-friendly). Use SMR only when cost is dominant and write workload is light.
Selection Criteria
Here are the criteria we used to pick the top drives:
- NAS-optimised drives: good reliability, NAS firmware, RAID compatibility
- Balanced capacity and value for typical home or SMB usage
- Consideration of drive technology (SMR vs CMR)
Top 4 NAS Drives to Consider
Seagate IronWolf Pro (NAS Drive Series)

- Pros:
- Built for NAS/RAID use, rated for 24/7 operation; reliability/back-end features strong.
- Uses CMR technology, so better for write‐heavy and rebuild scenarios.
- High capacities available, helping reduce number of drives needed.
- Cons:
- Higher cost per TB compared to entry drives.
- Some very large-capacity models may still have long rebuild times.
- For pure archival/light use, its extra features may be overkill (cost/benefit).
Buying Links (Amazon India) : IronWolf Pro 2TB | IronWolf Pro 4TB | IronWolf Pro 10TB
Seagate IronWolf (non-Pro series)

- Pros:
- Good value for many home/SMB NAS setups.
- Wide range of capacities.
- Cons:
- Endurance/workload rating lower than the Pro variant — less optimal for heavy RAID rebuilds or many users.
- Performance may vary across capacity sizes.
Buying Links (Amazon India) : IronWolf 2TB | IronWolf 4TB | IronWolf 6TB
Western Digital Red Plus / Red Pro (NAS HDD Series)

- Pros:
- Specifically labelled for NAS use; better assurance of compatibility and reliability.
- Strong brand/trust factor for home/SMB setups.
- Cons:
- Some earlier models may use SMR (or ambiguous recording tech) — verify CMR/SMR status.
- Performance (especially for large multi-drive RAID) may lag the highest-end models.
Buying Links (Amazon India) : WD 2TB WD Red Plus | WD 4TB WD Red Plus | WD 10TB WD Red Plus
Toshiba N300 (NAS HDD Series)

- Pros:
- Good budget option for NAS use, decent capacity and features for value-focused buyers.
- Cons:
- Might not have the same firmware optimisations or endurance as premium NAS drives.
- If used in heavier workloads (many users/RAID 6+) might show limits.
Buying Links (Amazon India) : Toshiba N300 Internal 4TB | Toshiba N300 Internal 14TB | Toshiba N300 Internal 10TB
(Note: these are affiliates link which support website.)
What to Choose Depending on Your Scenario
- Home user streaming + backups: Likely 2-bay or 4-bay, capacity ~8-12 TB (or higher if you media hoard), drives preferably CMR, brand + features for ease of use.
- Small business / shared files / RAID: Go 4-bay or more, choose drives explicitly rated for NAS, use CMR, pick a NAS enclosure with good network connectivity (2.5GbE or better if possible).
- Media library / archive / cold storage: You might lean towards higher capacity drives, possibly SMR if cost is important and writes are minimal; but RAID reliability still matters.
- Growth / advanced prosumer lab: Choose expandable NAS enclosure, high-capacity drives (16 TB+), good network connectivity (10 GbE), and drives with NAS/enterprise reliability.
Final Thoughts
Purchasing the right NAS drive is about more than just “how many TB”. The type of drive recording technology (CMR vs SMR), the NAS enclosure hardware, and your usage scenario all matter. For most users, I’d suggest starting with a trusted brand, drives rated for NAS use (CMR), and a capacity you’ll be happy with for the next few years.