Where to Buy Used & Refurbished Drives in the US

Published: 19 giugno 2026

Live answer · Amazon.com

Pulling live prices…

📊 As of June 23, 2026, the typical used HDD 1TB+ on Amazon.com is $39.75/TB or $0.04/GB, widest choice around $26.63/TB, with some as cheap as $15.52/TB across 1129 live listings.

Sourced from real discussions on r/DataHoarder and r/homelab, cross-checked against live PricePerGig listings.

eBay and Amazon Renewed are your go-to places for used drives. Flick through the available US marketplaces and you’ll see some of the cheapest used HDDs. Don’t be afraid of used. Hard drives carry what’s known as SMART data, which actually tells you whether the drive is silently breaking inside. If the SMART data is stationary, a used drive is about as likely to fail as a brand-new one in its first week, and even a new drive can fail in the first week!

The table above is locked to live US used prices, so you are seeing real US pricing, not a number bent by overseas VAT and shipping.

Here is where to buy and how to stay safe.

Where to actually buy in the US

After years of filling NAS boxes, here is my shortlist.

The live table above keeps you honest on price per TB. A listing well above it is not a bargain, it is a markup.

Why used is a smart move, not a risk

Plenty of people still flinch at “used hard drive”. They should not.

A recertified enterprise drive usually spent its life in a cool, steady datacenter, then got wiped, tested and rewarranted. That is often an easier life than a consumer drive baking on someone’s desk.

The reason you can do this with confidence is SMART data. Every drive logs its own health, and a free tool reads it out in seconds.

The quick SMART method that actually works

One glance on arrival is not enough. Take a reading, then watch whether it moves.

If the numbers start climbing instead, that is a drive quietly failing, and it is time to send it back. You did pick a seller where returns were accepted, right? That warranty window is exactly why you bought from a proper seller.

The bottom line

The US used scene is a goldmine for cheap terabytes if you shop with your eyes open.

Buy recertified enterprise drives from reputable eBay or specialist sellers with a solid warranty, ignore anything priced above the live US table above, and SMART check every single drive, on arrival and again after a fortnight of real use.

Do that and you will build dense, cheap storage that most people would not believe was second hand.

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