






⚡ Power Your Productivity with Samsung T7 – Speed Meets Style
The Samsung T7 Portable SSD offers lightning-fast USB 3.2 Gen 2 speeds up to 1,050MB/s in a sleek, shock-resistant aluminum design. With up to 4TB capacity and broad device compatibility, it’s engineered for professionals, gamers, and creators who demand reliable, high-performance external storage on the go.













| ASIN | B0874YJP92 |
| Additional Features | Portable |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4 in External Solid State Drives |
| Brand | Samsung |
| Built-In Media | USB Cable |
| Cache Memory Installed Size | 1 |
| Color | Blue |
| Compatible Devices | Gaming Console, Laptop, Smartphone, Television, iPhone 15 |
| Connectivity Technology | USB |
| Customer Package Type | Standard Packaging |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 37,232 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 10 Gigabits Per Second |
| Digital Storage Capacity | 1 TB |
| Enclosure Material | Nand Flash |
| Form Factor | Portable |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00887276410760 |
| Hard Disk Description | Solid State Hard Drive |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 2.5 Inches |
| Hard Disk Interface | USB 3.2 |
| Hard-Drive Size | 1 TB |
| Hardware Connectivity | USB |
| Installation Type | External Hard Drive |
| Item Dimensions L x W x Thickness | 3.3"L x 2.2"W x 0.3"Th |
| Item Height | 0.3 inches |
| Item Type Name | External Solid State Drive |
| Item Weight | 0.13 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Samsung |
| Media Speed | 1,000 MB/s |
| Model Name | SAMMUPC1T0H |
| Model Number | MU-PC1T0H/AM |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Read Speed | 1050 Megabytes Per Second |
| Special Feature | Portable |
| Specific Uses For Product | personal, gaming, business |
| UPC | 887276410760 |
| Warranty Description | 3 year limited warranty |
W**S
Much faster than HDD it replaced
The T7 was received in Fat32 Format with MBR Partition. I'm using this as a backup drive for a Win 11 Pro Desktop PC, so the first thing I did was reformat the Drive as NTFS with GPT partitions which is better suited for the Win 10/11 OS. With that out of the way, I turned to the provided USB C to C cable, it looks like good quality, however it's only 1 1/2ft long, too short for my needs, for I'm mounting the drive forward on the right side of my case, thus I picked up a 3.3ft USB C to C 3.2 Gen2 Cable (to insure the cable is up to speed with the SSD's capabilities) The drive itself I slipped into a Portable Hard Drive Sleeve that mounts to the side of my case. This is an ideal setup, it protects the SSD and secures it's position without fear of it being knocked to the floor, cable being disconnected or the SSD being misplaced for that matter. You never know, it is small and thin. Performance is as expected. It reads and writes IAW specs, about 10x faster than the HDD it replaced. When being accessed the highest temps, I've seen hovered around 42C, well below the 70C max you'll hate to see before thermal throttling kicks in. I expect this drive to have excellent longevity, just as I have achieved with a pair of Samsung M.2 PCIe's. Of course, length of service is dependent upon the quantity of processed data. For anyone in the market for a fast, high quality and reliable SSD storage device, I don't think you can go wrong making the Samsung T7 your choice.
J**E
Samsung #1
Top quality, no issues, uploading is fast, as well as downloading. The memory is huge. 200 hours of video, and it didn't even use 1% of storage space.
R**R
Huge speed boost for my older Mac — worth every penny
I bought the Samsung T7 2TB portable SSD mainly to give my older 2017 Mac a new lease on life. The internal 500GB platter style hard drive drive in that machine was painfully slow, so I set up macOS to run directly off the T7. The difference was night and day — boot times dropped to seconds, apps opened almost instantly, and overall the computer felt like a brand-new machine. Honestly, it sped things up exponentially compared to the stock drive. Beyond that, the T7 has been great for general storage and file transfers. It’s small, lightweight, and built solid with its aluminum casing, so I don’t worry about tossing it in my bag. Transfer speeds are fast enough that moving large projects doesn’t feel like a chore anymore, and I haven’t had any reliability issues. It also stays cool during everyday use, which isn’t always the case with portable SSDs. Compared to the older external hard drives I used before, this is in another league for both speed and portability. Against other portable SSDs, I think Samsung’s combination of performance and reliability is hard to beat at this price point. If you have an older computer that’s slowing you down, or you just need fast and dependable storage on the go, the T7 is an excellent choice. For me, it completely transformed the usability of my Mac and has become a tool I use every single day.
B**B
Decent portable SSD drive
Got this for backing up files and it works quite well so far. Not to much to say other than it works as advertised. I'm not overly concerned with speed for the backups so it is fast enough. Compact and easy to move from computer to computer. I would purchase again if I need another one in the future.
E**A
Lightweight, fast, and perfect for storing photos and videos!
Lightweight, fast, and perfect for storing photos and videos! I do a lot of video and photo work on my phone, so having a portable SSD that’s lightweight is a huge plus. The transfer speeds are extremely fast, which makes moving large files quick and painless. It works smoothly with my phone and computer, and I love that it’s shock-resistant and durable. It also runs completely silent - no noise at all - which I really appreciate when I’m working. For anyone who works with videos, photos, or large files, this SSD is an excellent choice. It’s reliable, compact, and offers plenty of storage without adding extra bulk. Considering the performance and quality, the value for money is great!
D**D
Cool
Great ssd, however don’t install the “magician” software. It literally can be classified as a virus. If you install it on Mac it makes it nearly impossible to uninstall and will keep coming back somehow after plugging in ANY external hard drive and try’s to act like the primary software for any source of storage. You have to go through an extremely unconventional way of removing the software. And the worst part of it all, is that the software is absolutely USELESS! You do not need the software to use it so don’t bother. Just delete the software file without installing and use it as any other external storage device to prevent dealing with such an atrocious excuse of a program.other than that, the ssd is fine. Good price and compares to other reputable brands. I don’t believe I saw it on the listing but it does come with a high speed gigabit usb c cable (as well as USB A but who uses that anymore?)
J**L
Fast, Portable SSD Lifesaver for M1 MacBook Air and M4 Mac Mini Storage Woes
I snagged the Samsung T7 Portable SSD (1TB, Gray) about five months ago from Amazon during a sale (~$90) to tackle storage limits on my 2020 MacBook Air M1 (16GB/256GB) and 2024 Mac mini M4 (16GB/256GB). As a web dev hobbyist training local AI models (e.g., Phi-3 Mini on my blog archives), I needed quick, reliable external space without slowing down my macOS Sequoia workflow. After reformatting to APFS in Disk Utility, it's been a seamless daily driver—plug-and-play via USB-C, no Samsung software required. Here's my experience from months of heavy use. Pros: Speed is the star—real-world reads/writes hit 850–950 MB/s direct into my Air's USB-C or Mini's Thunderbolt 4, blasting through 50GB ML datasets in under a minute (way faster than my old HDD). The 1TB capacity swallows backups, Python environments, and 4K video projects effortlessly, freeing my internals for active work. At pocket-sized (2.3 x 1.5 inches, 2 oz), it's perfect for shuttling between my portable Air and stationary Mini—no bulk for coffee-shop coding. The gray metal body with rubber grip shrugs off desk bumps, and it stays cool during long transfers. On my UGREEN Revodok 105 hub (for the Air's HDMI/charging setup), it runs stable via USB-A 3.0 (500 MB/s), but direct USB-C shines. Cross-platform? ExFAT default works great for Windows file shares with family. For the price, it's unbeatable value—durable, encrypted (hardware AES 256-bit), and future-proof for Apple Silicon. Cons: Out-of-box exFAT is fine, but reformatting to APFS (GUID scheme) is a must for Mac optimization—takes 5 minutes in Disk Utility, but newbies might skip it and see slower speeds. Theoretical 1,050 MB/s drops a bit on M1 USB-C (due to single-lane limits), but still blazing vs. competitors. The short USB-C cable (6 inches) means desk cable management, and no IP rating for water (grab the T7 Shield if outdoorsy). Tip: For M1/M4 Macs, erase/reformat to APFS right away (Disk Utility > Erase > APFS, GUID). Connect direct to USB-C for max speed; use with a hub like UGREEN's for multi-peripheral setups. Great for Time Machine—set it up in System Settings for automated backups. If sharing with Windows, stick to exFAT. This T7 is a no-brainer for Apple users needing portable power on a budget. It transformed my cramped setups into smooth-sailing storage havens. If you're juggling AI data or creative files, buy it—you won't regret!
Y**N
Great security
I’m not the most tech savvy and wanted backup on an external drive for graphics heavy work and photos. I remember the challenge of making my last external drive compatible and especially deleting old files, so I was a little anxious trying to find a solution. In case it helps someone else, I work primarily on an iPad Pro in a design program (Affinity) and needed a backup storage solution besides the Cloud. I didn’t really want a second cloud solution to be backup and can’t use an external drive with the iPad. I also have a MacBook, which has massive storage, but can’t be backed up to ICloud, while the ipad can backup to iCloud. My workaround for immediate file saving is to create shared files which are stored on iCloud (I call them Desktop) on the ipad. Desktop is stored on the hard drive of the MacBook and gets updated via ICloud device sharing even though I can’t initiate an iCloud backup from the MacBook. Inside Desktop I have labeled files as usual and a parent file for graphic design from the Ipad, broken down into 100+ named project files and sub files. Whenever I save from the ipad, I save to Desktop (in iCloud) and then choose the appropriate file within Desktop to save. This way I have the folders on the hard drive of the MacBook as interim backup, and am working around not having iCloud backup storage available when I’m on the MacBook. The T7 comes in as secure and portable physical data storage. The T7 drive is the hard copy backup of the files shared between the iPad and MacBook, I think necessary in case of some dreadful software issue, fire, or other unanticipated loss of access. I plan to have more than one as soon as I can afford it, to rotate. Again hopefully this may help someone like me who spent some solid hours figuring out a better way to secure my data and workaround the Mac user experience. Since I am wanted to do manual backups I needed the process to be easy so I wouldn’t avoid doing them, for obvious reasons. Though we don’t need to get into it here I don’t want to use Time Machine on my Mac to back up the disk. So I had to figure out something else. The T7 is great, easy to use, no time at all to install, self explanatory pretty much. I dragged folders full of work from the desktop (yes I like to see them, don’t judge) to backup. The initial backup was very quick and painless, most files were a few seconds. The graphics heavy files perhaps took about 10 minutes? These are massive, not a problem, and may have been quicker than this, I expected it to take more time. (My last iCloud backup was over 13 hours of anxiety - I kid you not and have since deleted almost all the working files from the drawing app after saving them in Desktop so they happen more quickly now, but still, I thought this was a daylong project). I experimented with dragging an old file to the trash from the T7 disk pane, and it worked as expected. I had to read online about how to go about copying my photos library (Mac) to disk, but it wasn’t hard. I have over 40,000 images, and it took about 20 minutes as I recall, if longer probably max 25. I tested the backup by remaining in the open pane and opening the photo files, which worked. Amazingly all this data barely touches the capacity of the drive, maybe 10% or less of a TB? Minuscule, anyway. 2 TB is overkill for me, especially since old files can easily be deleted. (This may be different for a user in Time Machine because it keeps multiple versions of your backups, and maybe more settings etc. which can take up a lot of space?- not tech savvy, as I said, but I had trouble with my older system and Time Machine and being unable to delete backups which rendered my backup disk unusable, and I didn’t want to deal with this again even though it’s less convenient to do it manually). I think the T7 drive will fail before I need more space, which is a great problem to have. I’m planning to get another disk (with less storage) and use it as a failsafe backup- ideally storing it in a safe or out of the house just in case, and keeping a rotation to protect against loss. On the critical end, I’d love it and think it would be much safer for data if the user pane of the T7 was visibly different from the one on my desktop. It’s the same color, font, everything, as my desktop window (maybe that’s just how these things work?), which makes me triple check when I’m deleting or updating. Don’t do this on a Friday night after an adult beverage…. I’d also love it if there was a simple tutorial available when you opened the disk up, just for ease of first use, a how to (experimented with a throwaway file deleting because it wasn’t obvious that dragging files to the trash would work) for most, and as a reminder for others. I hesitate getting one for my parents because of this. But I’m happy and will buy another, looking forward to the peace of mind it gives me.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago