Computer Atlas

SSD

Also known as: solid state drive, solid-state drive

beginner technology 3 min read · Updated 2026-06-08

A storage device that keeps data in flash memory chips with no moving parts — far faster than a spinning hard drive, and now the default storage in most computers.

Primary domain
Hardware & Architecture
Sub-category
Printed Circuit Boards, Peripherals & Integrated Circuits

In simple terms

An SSD (solid-state drive) stores your files in flash memory chips instead of on a spinning magnetic platter. “Solid-state” means no moving parts — nothing spins, nothing seeks. That makes it dramatically faster than the old hard disk it replaced, more rugged, silent, and lower-power. The single biggest speed upgrade most computers got in the last fifteen years was swapping a hard drive for an SSD.

More detail

An SSD is built from flash memory plus a controller chip that manages it. Because flash has quirks — it’s written in pages but erased in larger blocks, and each cell wears out after many writes — the controller does substantial work behind the scenes:

  • Wear leveling — spreading writes evenly across cells so no single area wears out early.
  • Garbage collection and TRIM — reclaiming blocks of deleted data so future writes stay fast.
  • Error correction — flash is noisy, so SSDs use heavy ECC.

SSDs come in interfaces that matter a lot for speed:

  • SATA SSDs — use the old hard-drive interface; a big jump over HDDs but capped by SATA’s bandwidth (~550 MB/s).
  • NVMe SSDs — connect over PCIe (often as an M.2 stick) and are several times faster again (multiple GB/s), because they were designed for flash rather than inheriting a disk-era protocol.

Flash cells also trade density against endurance: SLC (1 bit/cell) is fastest and most durable, while QLC (4 bits/cell) is cheaper and denser but slower and shorter-lived — which is why capacities rose and prices fell.

Why it matters

The move from HDD to SSD transformed everyday computing: boot times went from a minute to seconds, applications launch instantly, and laptops got thinner, quieter, and more battery-efficient. SSDs also reshaped data centers and databases, where low latency (not just throughput) is critical — random reads that crippled a spinning disk are trivial for flash. Today SSDs are the default, and HDDs survive mainly for cheap bulk capacity.

Real-world examples

  • Replacing an old laptop’s hard drive with an SSD is the classic cheap upgrade that makes the machine feel new.
  • An NVMe M.2 drive in a modern desktop reading data at several gigabytes per second.
  • Databases and game consoles adopting SSDs specifically to cut load and query latency.

Common misconceptions

  • “SSDs wear out fast, so they’re unreliable.” Flash cells do have limited write cycles, but wear leveling and modern endurance mean a typical consumer SSD outlasts the useful life of the computer for normal use.
  • “All SSDs are equally fast.” Interface (SATA vs. NVMe) and flash type (SLC→QLC) cause large, real differences in speed and endurance.

Learn next

An SSD is storage built from flash memory; the slower, mechanical alternative it largely replaced is the HDD.

Relationships

Requires

Neighborhood

A visual companion to the relationships above. Click any node to visit that topic.