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The Best NAS Devices for Your Home After Months of Testing

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Why This Matters

This article highlights the importance of NAS devices as versatile solutions for home data management, entertainment, and backup needs. As consumers seek more efficient and centralized storage options, these devices offer a significant upgrade to home networks, enabling better data security and media sharing. For the tech industry, this underscores the growing demand for user-friendly, high-performance storage solutions tailored for home use.

Key Takeaways

Whether you want to back up all your precious files, make it easier to share and collaborate, or create your own entertainment cloud, network-attached storage (NAS) devices are the way. These versatile servers can boost your home network and help you offload tasks from your computer and other devices.

I’ve spent the last few months testing NAS devices from some of the top brands with a focus on families looking to create backups and maybe spin up an entertainment server to cut back on streaming subscriptions. These are the NAS devices I recommend.

You might want to check out our related guides too, like How to Set Up an NAS Server, How to Back Up Your Digital Life, and The Best External Hard Drives.

The NAS Servers I Recommend Most

Photograph: Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill Chevron Chevron Save to wishlist Save to wishlist Synology DiskStation DS225+ $340 Amazon

While no longer undisputed, Synology is still the heavyweight champion of the NAS market, and this two-bay NAS is ideal for the average home. It is extremely fast, either topping the charts or coming close in my tests, and consistently hitting around 300 MB/s read and 250 MB/s write, though that drops to a little over 100 MB/s if your network is limited to 1 Gbps anywhere (router, port, cable, or switch). It has a generous array of ports (2.5-Gbps and 1-Gbps Ethernet ports and USB ports front and back). The excellent hardware includes a speedy Intel Celeron J4125 quad-core processor, 2 GB of RAM that can be upgraded to 6 GB, and space for two drives (up to 40 TB). It is compact and relatively quiet, with some minor fan noise when it’s busy. The screwless clip-on tray design makes it quick to insert drives.

Setup and configuration are simple and accessible. Synology’s software, through its web interface and mobile apps, is the most polished and user-friendly I’ve tested, and Synology offers the largest selection of apps (both its own polished offerings and third-party apps like Plex and Jellyfin). This NAS offers tons of flexibility for backups, works great as a media server, and offers a lot of extras, including VPN server and security camera support.

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