Samsung has denied rumors that it plans to end production of its consumer SATA SSDs, stating that the reports are false and that it intends to continue manufacturing these drives, according to a company spokesperson.
The rumors emerged amid strain on the global memory supply chain, as AI companies and cloud providers are purchasing large volumes of hardware, putting pressure on manufacturers. This situation intensified when Micron withdrew its Crucial brand from the consumer SSD market, prompting speculation that Samsung, the largest player, might follow.
SATA SSDs remain essential for older laptops, budget PCs, and mass storage systems, despite the speed advantages of NVMe drives. An exit by Samsung would have created significant market gaps and driven up prices.
Samsung’s decision to stay in the market does not eliminate broader challenges. Manufacturers are shifting production toward high-profit, high-tech memory such as HBM for data centers, at the expense of standard consumer products. This prioritization has led to shortages of general RAM and consumer storage.
PC manufacturers face increased costs, which are now appearing in higher retail prices for SSDs. Samsung SSDs will continue to be available on shelves, but consumers should expect elevated prices in the near term due to limited supply and strong demand from the AI sector.
SK hynix has indicated that supply bottlenecks will require months to resolve. The consumer storage market is likely to experience volatility and higher costs into next year as AI demand persists.




