How to Choose a USB Drive for Backups
A buyer’s guide for picking the right external storage for your backup needs.
Step 1: Figure Out What You Need
Before you start shopping, answer these questions:
- How much data do you need to back up? Check the total size of your critical files, then add 50% headroom for growth.
- How fast do you need transfers to be? If you’re backing up hundreds of gigabytes nightly, speed matters. For smaller weekly backups, it matters less.
- What’s your budget? Prices range from $20 for a basic flash drive to $200+ for a high-capacity external SSD.
Step 2: Know Your Options
There are three main types of external USB storage. Each has trade-offs.
External SSDs (Solid-State Drives)
Best for: Speed, durability, and daily backups of moderate data volumes.
- Fast read/write speeds (500-2,000 MB/s on USB 3.2 or Thunderbolt)
- No moving parts, so they handle drops and bumps well
- More expensive per gigabyte than HDDs
- Typical capacities: 500GB to 4TB
Recommended (2025): Samsung T9, Crucial X9 Pro, SanDisk Extreme V2. Look for USB 3.2 Gen 2 or later for best speeds.
External HDDs (Hard Disk Drives)
Best for: Large storage volumes on a budget.
- Cheapest cost per gigabyte
- Available in large capacities (1TB to 22TB+)
- Slower transfer speeds than SSDs (100-200 MB/s typical)
- Moving parts make them more fragile; handle with care
Recommended (2025): WD Elements, Seagate Backup Plus, Toshiba Canvio Advance. Good options for Time Machine backups or bulk file storage.
USB Flash Drives
Best for: Small data sets, document-level backups, or portable file transfers.
- Compact and easy to carry
- Affordable at lower capacities (8GB to 256GB)
- Slower than external SSDs
- Not ideal for full system backups
Recommended (2025): Samsung BAR Plus, SanDisk Ultra Fit. Fine for transferring files or backing up small document sets, but not a primary backup solution for a business.
Step 3: Compare Before You Buy
When evaluating specific models, look at:
| Factor | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Price | Compare across brands. Prices fluctuate, especially during sales events. |
| Reliability | Read reviews on sites like Wirecutter, Tom’s Hardware, and StorageReview. Ignore suspiciously glowing or vague reviews. |
| Speed | Check the USB standard (3.0, 3.2 Gen 1, 3.2 Gen 2, Thunderbolt). Higher numbers mean faster transfers, but your computer’s ports need to match. |
| Warranty | Most reputable brands offer 3-5 year warranties. Shorter warranties are a red flag. |
| Encryption | Some drives include hardware encryption (Samsung T9, for example). This is a nice-to-have for backup drives containing sensitive data. |
Step 4: Make Your Decision
There’s no single “best” drive for everyone. Here’s a quick decision guide:
| Your Situation | Best Choice |
|---|---|
| Daily backups of a small business server (under 2TB) | External SSD (Crucial X9 Pro, Samsung T9) |
| Large archive storage on a budget (4TB+) | External HDD (WD Elements, Seagate Backup Plus) |
| Portable document backups or file transfers | USB flash drive (Samsung BAR Plus) |
| Backup rotation for 3-2-1-1-0 strategy | Buy 2-3 identical external SSDs or HDDs and rotate them |
A Note on Backup Strategy
The drive is just one piece. Whatever you buy, follow these basics:
- [ ] Encrypt your backups so a lost or stolen drive doesn’t expose your data
- [ ] Rotate drives so you always have an offsite copy
- [ ] Test restores quarterly to make sure your backups actually work
- [ ] Replace drives every 3-5 years (or sooner if you notice errors during restore tests)
Bottom Line
For most small businesses, an external SSD in the 1-2TB range offers the best balance of speed, durability, and price. If you need more capacity and can tolerate slower speeds, an external HDD will save you money. Flash drives work in a pinch for small file sets but shouldn’t be your primary backup device.
Buy from reputable brands, check reviews, and remember that the cheapest option isn’t always the best value if it fails when you need it most.