At $0.042/GB, this 2TB HP SSD is the cheapest NVMe solid state drive on Prime Day and it’s the perfect upgrade for old PCs

HP EX900 Plus
(Image credit: Future)

Say hello to the HP EX900 Plus, a 2TB NVMe SSD that costs only $84.99, down from $99.99, a 15% or $15 discount. It is available exclusively for Amazon Prime Member on Prime Big deal days and comes with a 5-year limited warranty, lifetime technical support and a 100% compatibility rating with HP laptops and desktops.   

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Today's best HP EX900 Plus deal

Kingston EX900 Plus 2TB PCIe SSD:$99.99$84.99 at Amazon

Kingston EX900 Plus 2TB PCIe SSD: was $99.99 now $84.99 at Amazon
This 2TB PCIe internal SSD is all you need to store your big files fast and with a small price tag. With a 5-year warranty, the EX900 is another must-buy deal.

We haven’t reviewed it yet, but our peers at Tom’s Hardware tested the EX900, a slower version, at launch and concluded it, “passes very strict quality control standards and is guaranteed to work seamlessly in HP products. It's a good upgrade path for those looking to add NVMe performance to a system, but the price has to be right.”

Since this article was written more than half a decade ago, the price per TB went down by a staggering 90%. So what is the ideal use case for the EX900 Plus? You can convert it if y ou have a spare compatible exclosure into a super fast portable SSD.

You can also swap an existing system hard drive for one of them to get a significant performance improvement. You will need to migrate your operating system and accompanying files over using a data migration tool. But you can also use the free Acronis True Image software to clone your system drive as well.

Want to find out more about SSDs? Then check out our round up of the best SSD and the best SSD deals you can grab right now.

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Desire Athow
Managing Editor, TechRadar Pro

Désiré has been musing and writing about technology during a career spanning four decades. He dabbled in website builders and web hosting when DHTML and frames were in vogue and started narrating about the impact of technology on society just before the start of the Y2K hysteria at the turn of the last millennium.