





Ever wonder why your phone responds faster than your computer? It’s because your phone runs on flash memory. Add flash to your laptop or desktop computer with the Crucial BX500 SSD, the easiest way to get all the speed of a new computer without the price. Accelerate everything.
Boot up faster. Load files quicker. Improve overall system responsiveness
300% faster than a typical hard drive
Improves battery life because it’s 45x more energy efficient than a typical hard drive
Micron 3D NAND – advancing the world’s memory and storage technology for 40 years
Crucial 3-year limited warranty
11 reviews for Crucial BX500 2TB 3D NAND SATA 2.5-Inch Internal SSD, up to 540MB/s – CT2000BX500SSD1, Solid State Drive
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$12.99

The beard of knowledge –
Brought my old HP back to life
Dropped this into an older HP laptop that was crawling and now it runs like new. Boot times are snappy, apps launch instantly, and overall responsiveness is night-and-day better. Installation was simple, and the system recognized it right away. If you’re trying to squeeze more life out of aging hardware, this upgrade is a no-brainer. Totally worth it.
Pamela Ballantyne –
Fantastic SSD, horrible cloning software.
I’ve been a longtime fan of Crucial memory products, so trying this SSD out to give my old P920 some new life was a no-brainer. It’s a fantastic SSD, with excellent capacity and performance., The executive software that allows you to tweak various performance characteristics of the drive is great – make sure to download it from the Crucial site when you have it installed.Regrettably, my enthusiasm does not extend to Crucial’s recommendation of the Acronis software for cloning your boot drive. It simply did not work for me. I was moving a 5 TB drive to the 4 TB drive. Only 1.1 TB of the original hard drive was in use, so it should have been no problem. But the Acronis software couldn’t handle it – it said there wasn’t enough room on the 4 TB Crucial drive to store the 1.1 TB of stuff from my HD!What’s worse is that it took about 4 hours for the Acronis software to decide it couldn’t do what I wanted. I was able to use the free utility, DiskGenius, to clone the drive. It worked great, cloning all the partitions, including the rescue partition, adjusting them proportionally. If you have trouble with Acronis, give this a try.
Drew –
Reliable Speed Boost at a Great Price
I installed the Crucial BX500 1TB SSD in a client’s aging laptop, and the performance difference was night and day. Boot times dropped from minutes to seconds, applications launch instantly, and overall responsiveness is dramatically improved. For anyone upgrading from a traditional hard drive, this is a game-changer.Installation was straightforward, standard 2.5-inch SATA interface, no surprises. The drive runs cool and quiet, and the 540MB/s read speed holds up well in real-world use. Crucial’s reputation for reliability gave me confidence, and so far, it’s been rock solid.Whether you’re reviving an older system or adding fast storage to a desktop, this SSD delivers excellent value. I’ve used it in multiple builds and repairs, and it’s become a go-to recommendation for clients who want speed without breaking the bank.
Car Guy & Reader –
Good SSD, good value
Used these to set up a NAS. Worked right out of the box, they seem plenty quick enough. A good value for a 4GB SSD. Even if they’re not really 4 GB. Like every other vendor, Crucial counts in multiples of 1000 bytes, rather than 1028.
M. Martel –
BX300: Good enough, fast enough for normies from a reliable brand – benchmark-chasers look elsewhere
Review of BX300 480GB drive. Let me be frank. This is a budget drive that likely uses decent, reliable but not top of the line NAND. Things pricier drives will give you:- DRAM cache: ❌- Heat-sink metal casing good for sustained write performance: ❌- Bragging rights on read and write speed: ❌On the other hand, maybe you’re not a benchmark chaser. Just a normie just looking for a decent drive that will do the things you want an SSD to do (better read/write speed and silent performance compared to HDDs) from a brand you can trust to stand behind the product if, heaven forbid, you get a lemon.If you’re one of these people, I can wholeheartedly recommend this drive to you. I use it with Linux Mint on a 12th gen i5 equipped mini PC and I have zero complaints about performance. I don’t have a stopwatch to tell you exact speeds, I’m not going to compare it with NVME drives or the best SSDs. I’m just going to tell you: It’s plenty fast enough for normies.
Jesse W –
Decent for storage if you only care about read speed.
Works for storing data where read speed is more important than write speed. Think movies or games.Pros:Decent price per GB.Good read speeds, up to 500 MB/s as advertised.Cons:Writes are slow for a solid state drive. Around 50 MB/s best case, one big file. I often average single digit MB/s if writing a lot of small files. Seems like a it should be faster, but I guess you get what you pay for.A tale of two drives:1. Replaced a 5400rpm HDD in an old laptop. Boots up quickly, plenty responsive for a 3rd gen i7 machine.2. Added it to a modern 12th gen i7 machine to hold VMs. I got suspicious when it took a while to copy the 80 GBs of VMs to the new drive. But, the VMs booted up and ran fine.One time it did freak out and stop responding until I restarted. This was during a lot of random writes from parallel file downloads and response times got into the 3000ms range before it just locked up. I don’t try to run VMs from it anymore and I wouldn’t use it as the boot drive on a modern system.
Alain Ordi –
Not as good as the MX 500 but those are discontinued.They work well for what I needed, the speed is acceptable and the price is right.
Soliva Guimarães Pestana –
Produto muito bom… HD rapido e de otima qualidade
Mergatroid –
So I have been using a mechanical 2TB hard drive in my bench PC for backing up people’s files and storing images for clients until I can restore them.It’s been working OK, but a few weeks ago I had to back up files for a client and they had about 500GB of files and pictures and backups on their storage drive.I started doing the backup from a USB 3 dock, and it crawled. It was getting about 40MB/s and varying around that value up and down. Later I tested moving a large amount of data from my boot SSD using the same method and it was in the hundreds of MB/s.So I purchased this Crucial 2TB SSD (for $150) to replace the mechanical drive. (it’s gone up $30)I work in a shop, and we sell a lot of SSDs. I have had the best luck with Crucial, Kingston (budget drives), Samsung and Western Digital.We purchased some ADATA 2.5″ SSDs, but almost all of them went bad. ADATA replaced them with a different model, and one of those went bad as well (out of ten drives). We stopped purchasing that brand.Western Digital drives have been good too, but my personal 1TB Western Digital drive went bad. It will no longer get SSD speeds, but only transfers files at very slow speeds (slower than USB 2) even after reformatting.Crucial makes excellent drives, and I can rely on them. Highly recommended. I would not hesitate to purchase any of the drives I have mentioned other than maybe ADATA, but I am sure they will correct the problem they were having if they haven’t already. I am using a 500GB ADATA NVMe drive in my gaming PC as my Windows drive. I’ve had it for about 3 or 4 years now and it’s been very reliable.
C. C. Brown –
I have owned various PCs in the last 20 years or so and they all had old school mechanical HDDs, and to be honest I never really had many issues with them. All my PCs were either from before SSDs existed or were from when they were still quite expensive and generally came in smaller capacities (my current rig is around 6 or so years old).As I cannot afford to upgrade right now or ideally build my own, I decided to make some tweaks to my existing rig as it is still fairly decent for its age. I upgraded ram a couple of years ago (2x16gb sticks) and last week upgraded from the stock cooler to a much beefier Be Quiet cooler as the CPU was really getting hot under heavy load.While I was at it I thought it was time to finally go over to an SSD seeing as they now have much better capacity for not a lot of money.I decided to go for Crucial as I have always had good experience with them. My PC ram is Crucial and so is the M.2 SSD in my PS5. I felt this had the specs that suited me and as I say, price wise, it was pretty damn cheap. Sadly due to my board being slightly older and being a micro ATX I don’t have an M.2 slot, so SATA was the only way to go.I did make one error though as I assumed it would come with a SATA cable, but of course we know what you do if you “assume” anything. It was a simple enough solution, order a cable from Amazon and just fit the drive a day later than planned (I only mention this as I am sure there are others as naive as me who will get caught out too).It was very simple to fit as well. Plugged the SATA cable into the drive and the motherboard and found a spare power plug coming from the power supply that fitted as well and then it was time to test things out.Booted the PC up and while it did take a while to boot (remember this is still booting to my old drive) which is quite normal when installing new parts, but booted as normal. I then opened Acronis True Image (go to the website on the SSD instructions and download the file) and followed the onscreen prompts to clone my old HDD to my new SSD. I had deleted all my music from the HDD before starting this as it took up over 400gb and I felt that would just slow the cloning process down. Even with another 400+ storage still on the drive, it only took about 2 hours to do a full copy.After it was finished I rebooted the PC, went into bios and assigned the SSD as my new boot drive.The PC then booted to Windows so much faster than it normally does and programs loads almost instantly rather than the delayed response of yore.Even web browsers and internet tabs load faster.I also noticed that after the PC logs into Windows I can access programs straight away rather than waiting for Windows to do all its stuff before being allowed to access anything.Seriously loving this piece of kit. The way it works is perfect for me, and is going to make using my PC so much of a better experience than it has been. Factor in the easy installation and the free no issues cloning software, and I think I got an absolute bargain at less than £40.Oh, and I kept the old HDD in the rig but formatted it to use just as storage for my music which I have already reinstalled.Only one program had an issue, with my copy of Photoshop saying the licence was not on it, but that was easily rectifiable, and every other program seems to have carried the licences over.
Jose Manuel –
Esperemos que funcione y no vuelva a perder todos los datos en garatia, como el amterior.