Conclusion

The Samsung 870 EVO is a new SATA SSD in a market where all the interesting action is centered around NVMe SSDs. The 870 EVO is necessarily a low-key product refresh, but Samsung deserves praise for actually making this a new model instead of simply updating the parts used in the 860 EVO.

Given the limitations imposed by the SATA interface, our expectations for any new SATA SSD are mild. Performance can only improve in the corner cases and power efficiency cannot make big leaps without getting rid of the SATA performance limits. Prices can go down, but we've been seeing a lot of that even without a new generation of 3D NAND and SSD controller: the 860 EVO is currently selling for about a third of what the launch MSRPs were in 2018. The Samsung 870 EVO's newer 128L flash may be setting the stage for future price drops, but this early in Samsung's transition to 128L flash it's not bringing any savings to consumers.

Knowing that any changes the 870 EVO brings relative to its predecessor will be minor, the most important function of this review is simply to check whether Samsung remains at least consistent with the refresh. As far as we can tell, all seems to be well. Our testing didn't reveal any serious performance regressions, though several signs point to the 870 EVO's SLC caching being a bit less effective. Since this only shows up on tests that are deliberately more strenuous than any common consumer workload, we're not concerned by these results. Otherwise, the 870 EVO continues to be just about as fast as possible for a SATA SSD, and is a fine replacement for the 860 EVO.

It is a little disappointing that the 870 EVO doesn't bring further improvements to power efficiency. Since the 860 EVO's launch, SK hynix has raised the bar for consumer SSD efficiency in both the SATA and NVMe market segments, but Samsung is not challenging that leadership with their recent launches.

Widespread adoption of NVMe in the consumer space means the role of SATA SSDs is shifting and shrinking. There's no longer any point in competing to offer the fastest SATA SSD, and not much reason to compete on write endurance when any workload that actually pushes the endurance limits of mainstream consumer SSDs would benefit greatly from NVMe performance. Most systems that are too old to support NVMe SSDs probably have more serious performance bottlenecks than storage performance. So the 870 EVO has to compete more in the role of secondary storage, providing extra capacity for things like an overflowing video game library. With game developers only just beginning to explore ways to make use of NVMe performance, most any mainstream SATA SSD will offer more than enough performance and endurance for this use case now and for the near future.

  250 GB 500 GB 1 TB 2 TB 4 TB
Samsung 870 EVO $39.99 (16¢/GB) $64.99 (13¢/GB) $129.99 (13¢/GB) $249.99 (12¢/GB) $479.99 (12¢/GB)
Samsung 870 QVO     $109.99 (11¢/GB) $218.00 (11¢/GB) $411.77 (10¢/GB)
Samsung 860 EVO $39.99 (16¢/GB) $59.99 (12¢/GB) $109.99 (11¢/GB) $229.99 (11¢/GB) $444.76 (11¢/GB)
Samsung 860 PRO $68.80 (27¢/GB) $99.99 (20¢/GB) $199.99 (20¢/GB) $379.99 (19¢/GB) $729.99 (18¢/GB)
WD Blue 3D NAND $40.48 (16¢/GB) $59.99 (12¢/GB) $97.99 (10¢/GB) $199.99 (10¢/GB) $442.99 (11¢/GB)
Crucial MX500 $48.99 (20¢/GB) $53.99 (11¢/GB) $104.99 (10¢/GB) $209.99 (10¢/GB)  
SK hynix Gold S31 $43.99 (18¢/GB) $56.99 (11¢/GB) $104.99 (10¢/GB)    
NVMe
Samsung 970 EVO Plus $59.99 (24¢/GB) $79.99 (16¢/GB) $164.99 (16¢/GB) $320.44 (16¢/GB)  
SK hynix Gold P31   $74.99 (15¢/GB) $134.99 (13¢/GB)    
Sabrent Rocket Q   $64.99 (13¢/GB) $109.98 (11¢/GB) $219.98 (11¢/GB) $599.98 (15¢/GB)
WD Blue SN550 $42.99 (17¢/GB) $59.99 (12¢/GB) $109.99 (11¢/GB) $224.99 (11¢/GB)  

Now that its successor is out, the Samsung 860 EVO will eventually be going away, but it's likely to still be in stock with major retailers for at least several months, and with third-party sellers for much longer. For now, the 860 EVO is cheaper than the 870 EVO for all but the smallest capacity, and that makes the 860 the smarter buy. But as Samsung transitions more fab capacity to their 128L TLC, this situation will change. (The 860 EVO also manages to be priced quite well against the 870 QVO, which really should offer more than just $10 savings at 2TB.)

Other major brands like Western Digital, Crucial and SK hynix offer great SATA SSDs that are generally cheaper than Samsung's 870 EVO. Samsung's performance advantages are too slight to justify any significant price premium. I also don't think that Samsung's reputation for quality is so much stronger than these competitors that Samsung should be charging $25 more at 1TB and $40-50 more at 2TB compared to eg. Western Digital.

The decline of the SATA SSD market broadly will take at least a few more years. But Samsung's niche as the premium choice within the SATA SSD market is shrinking much more quickly. If you want to spend a bit more to get a nicer than average SSD, the obvious route it to spring for a decent NVMe SSD that at least offers the possibility of being noticeably faster. But if you just need another terabyte or two of good-enough storage in a system where space is getting tight, there area a variety of cost-effective models with similar performance that fit the bill.

Mixed IO Performance and Idle Power Management
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  • Spunjji - Friday, February 19, 2021 - link

    They won't be using SATA - and it will be spread across a whole lot more than one single drive.
  • dotjaz - Friday, February 19, 2021 - link

    But they are using SATA, nobody said it's single drive. It's how much storage you can fit into a 1U rack that matters, SATA is the only choice at the moment.
  • schujj07 - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    That is 100% false. NVMe is only surface area limited in the M.2 form factor. However, 99% of users do not need more than a 4TB NVMe SSD. Those that need larger drives can use M.2 > U.2 converters and get much larger SSDs.
  • Beaver M. - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    Yeah well, look into most SATA SSDs, their PCB isnt bigger than that of a M.2 SSD. Plus M.3 is coming = more space.
    Also theres U.2, which pretty much allows to use 2.5"-sized SSDs to be used (even on a M.2 connector).
    SATA is dead. And they know it, else they would have released a new standard very long ago.
  • nevcairiel - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    The solution to that is called U.2, NVMe with a cable.
  • flgt - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    ^^^
  • CaedenV - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    not really? You are typically limited to 8 or 16 chips with most SSDs, and you can hold that on a long double-sided m.2 just fine. If you are going with more than that then you are looking something extremely custom with a built in raid of some sort and that is going to be stupidly expensive and not for the consumer market.
    Just look at the pic of that 4TB board. Maybe 4 storage modules in it assuming there are 2 more on the other side? You can easily fit that on m.2 with room to spare.
  • flyingpants265 - Thursday, February 18, 2021 - link

    Storage in general is kinda dead. People buy 2tb drives very reluctantly if they want to add space.
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    SATA as an SSD interface is going nowhere. SATA as an HDD interface probably has 5-10 years left before the price crossover finally kills spinning rust off.

    If at some point in the future we do see a new SATA spec; it'll be because mass market spinning rust for NASes has gotten fast enough to bottleneck: In which case they'll backport the faster transport parts of the 2x as fast SAS standard to make SATA4.
  • wicketr - Wednesday, February 17, 2021 - link

    SATA at this point is need of major changes to keep up. They can't do a minor refresh at this point. With that in mind, I hope they change the cable so that it incorporates power into it as well. And they've got to shoot for something like 50Gb/s.

    At this point the latest USB spec is faster and provides power in a similar sized port. SATA should be able to beat that and it's a shame they haven't done so yet.

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