










🚀 Power your NAS with unstoppable speed and rock-solid reliability!
The Seagate IronWolf 12TB NAS Internal Hard Drive is a purpose-built, 3.5-inch SATA HDD designed for multi-user NAS setups up to 8 bays. Featuring a 7200 RPM spindle speed, 256MB cache, and 6Gbps data transfer rate, it delivers fast, reliable performance with minimal noise and vibration. Integrated IronWolf Health Management ensures proactive monitoring, while a 3-year limited warranty and Rescue Data Recovery service provide unmatched data protection and peace of mind.













| ASIN | B084ZTSMWF |
| Additional Features | Data Recovery Service |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1 in Internal Hard Drives |
| Brand | Seagate |
| Built-In Media | IronWolf™ 12TB SATA |
| Cache Memory Installed Size | 256 |
| Color | NAS |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop,Gaming Console,Camera |
| Connectivity Technology | SATA |
| Customer Package Type | Standard Packaging |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 13,680 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 6 Gigabits Per Second |
| Digital Storage Capacity | 12 TB |
| Enclosure Material | Metal |
| Form Factor | 3.5-inch |
| Hard Disk Description | Mechanical Hard Disk |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 3.5 Inches |
| Hard Disk Interface | Serial ATA |
| Hard Disk Rotational Speed | 7200 RPM |
| Hard-Drive Size | 12 TB |
| Hardware Connectivity | SATA 6.0 Gb/s |
| Installation Type | Internal Hard Drive |
| Item Dimensions L x W x Thickness | 5.79"L x 4.01"W x 1.03"Th |
| Item Weight | 1.4 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Seagate |
| Media Speed | 240 |
| Model Name | ST12000VN0008/ST12000VNZ008 |
| Model Number | ST12000VN0008/ST12000VNZ008 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Read Speed | 180 Megabytes Per Second |
| Special Feature | Data Recovery Service |
| Specific Uses For Product | business, personal |
| UPC | 763649136348 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 3 Year Limited |
A**E
Good drive, good price (when on sale).
I bought a 4TB Seagate Ironwolf drive to replace a WD drive I had that was giving errors in my UNRAID server. I have not bought a Seagate drive in a very long time. There was a period of time when Seagate was great, then a period of time when they were not so great. Anyway, I figured I would give Seagate a try again, especially since their drive was $15 cheaper than the same WD drive at the time. I received my drive and it was well packaged in protective packaging and inside a box. The drive had the same familiar footprint dimensions but was a shorter height which was interesting. Anyway, it didn't make a difference really. I removed my failing WD drive from the server, and then slotted this seagate drive in. I then started the server and once booted I assigned the drive to the correct slot in the menu and the server immediately began rebuilding the data on the new seagate drive. The drive had zero issues and zero errors on it from testing and rebuilding. It delivers good read/write speeds, but read/write speeds are really dependent upon many factors and what the server is doing at the time and so forth, so no detailed reports on that. The Seagate drive has been running 24/7 on my server for about a month now and not a single issue with it so far. The shorter height is interesting as it lets more air from the front facing fans pass between it and the drive above it, so that is a plus I suppose. If this drive holds up for 6+ months I will probably replace more of my server drives with Seagate drives. I have 2 other server drives coming on replacement time in near while, so I will be purchasing at least a couple more of these as they go on sale from time to time. I will need to compare the longevity of the Seagate drives with the WD drives. I've had good luck with WD up until about a year ago. Now, their drives do not seem to be of the quality that they once were. I get a lot of errors on some WD drives sooner than expected. Hopefully these Seagate drives fair better. Anyhow, so far so good. -------------------------------------------- UPDATE 15AUG2025 -------------------------------------------- So, a 4TB WD RED PLUS drive in my server went bad. The drive is 4 month old. It started about a week ago with some Sector Reallocation errors, then more errors over the days... then hundreds of bad sectors. I couldn't write data to the drive anymore, then the server kicked out the drive and refuses to start it up. I pulled the drive and tested on my PC... yeah, the drive is going bad, and it is going bad fast. I formatted it, put it back in the server (to trick the server into thinking it was a new drive), it rebuilt the data (after about 10 hours or so), and all seemed fine. But, soon after (within hours), it started acting up again. Definitely a bad drive. I can read data from it, but writing to it is challenging as it triggers a cascade of sector errors. Had to call WD today and RMA the drive... now I have to pack it up and ship it at my expense to get a replacement. Honestly, it's probably not worth it. I do not want another new WD drive in my server. I'll probably put in on light duty on one of the kids PCs or something instead. WD's quality has fallen into the toilet, and this new drive I will get from them will probably be another bomb waiting to happen. You know sticking in a new replacement into the server and waiting 10 to 12 hours for the data to rebuild is not particularly fun. WD I am not impressed in the slightest. This is particularly bad since this was a BRAND NEW RED PLUS drive. I not long ago replaced another WD drive with a Seagate. A brand new WD Red Plus..... and sitting next to it is a 5 year old WD Blue purring away happily without complaint... WOW! What happened to WD?!?!?! I have a 7 year old WD Green (they don't even make them anymore) that still works fine... and a new RED Plus can't make it past 4 months. Amazing. I even have a WD Blue that is years and years old in my security camera DRV/NVR recording 24/7... never has an issue...WD used to make good product. They are garbage now in my opinion. So, guess what I ordered as a replacement for the RED PLUS? Yep, I ordered a Seagate Ironwolf... even though WD is giving me a replacement (which you have to wait weeks and weeks for), I am paying for another Seagate to replace it with. The Red Plus will never see the inside of my server as I do not need the aggravation. It might be a long long long time before I ever order another WD drive again. Not until they sort out their quality again. My advice is to stay away from WD drives.... it is hit and miss with them. It is like playing Russian roulette with your data. So, we are down to two players left in the HDD world; Seagate and Toshiba. But, for now I am happy with Seagate. -------------------------------------------- UPDATE 06OCT2025 -------------------------------------------- I did finally receive the replacement WD RED Drive. WD sent me a white label drive instead of a RED label drive. It's basically the same drive but it has a label that looks like some printed on a thermal printer type label that they must issue when doing replacements or something. I didn't put it in my server. Instead, I have replaced 4 drives in my server with Seagate drives now. I even replaced my parity drive with a Seagate at this point, since it was a WD and started giving SMART warnings as well. So, the UNRAID server is almost entirely Seagate drives now and everything is running happy and smooth. The LSA HBA card has no issues with these drives at all and UNRAID sees them as normal SATA drives (normal as if they were connected to the motherboard directly)... just in case there are any UNRAIDers out there considering a LSA HBA card... I used a 9300 16i that was already in IT mode... zero issue with it with UNRAID... plug and play literally, the drivers come up automatically during boot. Anyway, the Seagate drives have been awesome so far.
S**L
Reliable, fast, and perfect for NAS backup
Excellent hard drive. I’m using it in my backup NAS running OpenMediaVault, and it’s been a real workhorse. Super fast performance, quiet, and rock solid in RAID. Seagate IronWolf drives never disappoint — highly reliable for 24/7 NAS use.
P**O
Worked perfectly in a Reolink 32 channel NVR
My in laws recently had to move into a new warehouse. After getting quotes up the yin yang to install security cameras in the facility (everything also tacked on monthly "cloud" subscription costs) we decided to go the DIY route. We ended up with Reolink's 32 channel capable system and hooked up 24 of the 32 channels. The 32 channel system comes with NO hardrive so you buy what fits your needs... Enter this hard drive. Installation is easy just mount and hook in the power and sata cables. The NVR had no issues formatting then writing onto the drive. Playback had no issues and all 24 channels records at the max 4k res and capturing everything important in the facility. Great bang per gig buck along with being a NAS drive - it should go on for many years. Solid drive - easy and straight forward - works in the NVR capturing 24 ip streams - love it! Going the DIY route btw did save us over 15K and got better equipment to boot!
H**D
So much Storage!
Really happy I bought this for Plex—it's fast, reliable, and easy to use, perfectly compatible with the Ugreen DXP 4800 Plus NAS. No issues so far. It does get somewhat warm, but that's to be expected, and it fits perfectly in the NAS drive bays.
G**S
Terrible Customer Support
The drives themselves are great -- when they work, but when they don't you'll have to deal with a terrible, extended customer support situation. I have purchased 4 of these drives so far, and one has had issues since I received it. It started out causing random freezes in my RAID array, mount failures on startup, extended delays on shutdown, etc. After a few months, I was finally able to determine this was all caused by a hardware issue, and which drive was the problem because SMART started throwing out warnings about bad sectors. This is further confirmed, because after removing the drive the array functions without any issues. I started a warranty replacement with Seagate about a month ago now. To start, you have to pay return shipping when they send you a faulty drive. That's annoying, but not a dealbreaker. The drive is delivered and USPS/tracking confirms its delivery. After a few days, Seagate still shows nothing on my case number. I contact support, they say they require 10 business days after delivery before they will update your case status to being received. After 14 business days of no response, I contacted support again. They then say they never received the drive (AKA, Seagate lost it), and tell me to contact USPS to get a "Tracer". I contact support again after receiving the tracer, they say they'll escalate the ticket and have the warehouse look for it (you didn't do that already?!). I'm still waiting on a replacement drive, if I ever will get one. Supposedly, if they look for the drive they lost, and don't find it, they'll send a replacement drive. I don't see how any of this is my fault or problem though, and it's absurd that I still don't have the working drive that I paid for, but they refuse to send a replacement until they complete this search they should have done weeks ago. UPDATE: I have contacted support twice since this review, they never found the drive, they never sent a replacement. They also never contacted me at any point in this process. I have always had to wait and contact them again, even when a rep would confirm my email address and directly say they would email me. Supposedly, after this most recent conversation they are just sending a replacement. I'm not going to hold my breath, but maybe after over a month of this they're going to actually send a replacement. I also confirmed with support, that the other reviews are correct. They will only ever send a refurbished drive -- even though in my case I never received the new, working drive I ordered. It has been stuttering and causing freezes ever since I purchased it, I just couldn't figure out which drive was the problem before the return window. They also claim they will send the same model, so fingers crossed that's true (unlike what other reviews have state here). I have my doubts though. I'll never buy Seagate again. UPDATE #2: The saga continues. My ticket was marked as "completely processed" and I was never sent a replacement. I confirmed with support that they also don't have a tracking number. Only time will tell if I ever get the USED drive I paid full price + extra shipping + many hours for. UPDATE #3: I finally got a replacement drive. Surprise! It's completely DOA. It doesn't spin up, it just beeps (indicating internal component failure). Starting all over with this whole process (almost a year after placing the original order). At least they provided a pre-paid shipping label to send back the dead replacement drive they sent me.... UPDATE #4: I did finally get a hard drive that worked... but a couple months later a different drive (I have 4, all ordered about a year ago) started failing. Bad sectors, completely unreadable, could not be allocated. This would mean data loss/corrupted files, if this drive was not in a RAID array with redundancy. At this point it is almost comical how unreliable these drives are. DO NOT buy these! UPDATE #5: Another dead-on-arrival replacement "certified rerfurbished" drive. Doesn't spin, just beeps. Tried it in my NAS, desktop, and an enclosure. The drive is completely non-functional. This company is a joke.
S**S
Reliable Storage for Network Attached Systems
When you're building or upgrading a NAS system, drive reliability is paramount. The Seagate IronWolf Pro is designed specifically for enterprise NAS environments, and it delivers the performance and durability you need for always-on storage. This is a serious drive for serious storage needs. The 8TB capacity provides substantial storage space for a single drive. Whether you're storing large media files, running virtual machines, or handling heavy data workloads, having 8TB per drive means you can build high-capacity arrays without needing excessive drive bays. The capacity-to-cost ratio is excellent for this performance tier. CMR (Conventional Magnetic Recording) technology is a key advantage. Unlike SMR drives that can have performance issues with certain workloads, CMR provides consistent performance for NAS applications. Write operations don't bog down, and the drive handles simultaneous read-write operations smoothly. That consistent performance is crucial for multi-user environments. The 7200 RPM spindle speed delivers solid performance. Data access is quick, transfer rates are strong, and the drive handles demanding workloads without bottlenecking. Whether you're streaming multiple 4K video files or running database operations, the performance keeps up with what you're asking it to do. The 256MB cache is generous and helps with performance optimization. Frequently accessed data stays in cache for faster retrieval, and the drive can manage multiple operations more efficiently. That large cache contributes to the smooth, responsive performance you experience during actual use. SATA 6Gb/s interface provides the bandwidth needed for high-performance NAS applications. The drive can saturate the interface when needed, delivering the throughput that modern NAS workloads demand. Transfer speeds are consistently strong across different file types and access patterns. Build quality and reliability engineering are where the IronWolf Pro designation matters. These drives are rated for higher workload limits than consumer drives, with specifications that support 24/7 operation. The mean time between failures is rated at 1.2 million hours, indicating enterprise-grade reliability expectations. Vibration tolerance is engineered for multi-drive environments. NAS enclosures typically house multiple drives running simultaneously, which creates vibration. The IronWolf Pro is designed to maintain performance and reliability even with the vibration levels present in populated NAS chassis. That tolerance prevents performance degradation and premature failure. Noise and heat levels are reasonable for a 7200 RPM enterprise drive. It's not silent – there's the characteristic spinning platter sound – but it's not excessively loud either. Heat output is manageable with proper NAS ventilation. These drives operate within acceptable temperature ranges in well-ventilated enclosures. The rotational vibration sensors actively monitor and correct for vibration in real-time. This technology helps maintain performance and positioning accuracy even when multiple drives are working simultaneously in the same enclosure. It's one of the features that distinguishes NAS-specific drives from desktop models. Data recovery services are included for three years, which provides additional peace of mind. If a drive does fail and you need professional data recovery, having that service available can be invaluable. While you should always have backups, having recovery service as a safety net is reassuring. Power consumption is optimized for NAS environments. The drive balances performance with power efficiency, which matters when you're running multiple drives 24/7. Lower power consumption means lower operating costs and less heat generation in your NAS enclosure. Compatibility with major NAS platforms is excellent. Whether you're running Synology, QNAP, or another NAS operating system, these drives are recognized and work without issues. Seagate provides compatibility lists and optimization guides for popular NAS brands. Performance consistency over time remains strong. These drives don't show significant performance degradation as they age. The combination of quality components and robust firmware keeps them running reliably throughout their service life. Warranty coverage at five years demonstrates Seagate's confidence in these drives. That long warranty period provides protection for a substantial portion of the drive's expected lifespan. Having that coverage matters when you're investing in enterprise-grade storage. For anyone building or upgrading a NAS system and needing reliable, high-performance drives, the IronWolf Pro is an excellent choice. It's engineered specifically for NAS workloads, delivers consistent performance, and provides the reliability needed for always-on storage systems. Whether you're setting up a home media server or deploying small business storage, these drives give you enterprise-level reliability at a reasonable price point.
L**N
More audible noise than expected.
Oh My Gosh this thing is noisy. I can clearly hear them from across the room when its quiet. Given the year and the advancement in HDD tech, they should be nearly silent. As in if you stood a foot away from the enclosure, with no noise around, just barely hear something. Nearly every other drive I've bought is that quiet. Not these babies! I had a set of 4 TB Western Digital drives, in a QNAP NAS. One went bad, and due to age, I decided to just upgrade. The NAS is in a FROG which serves as a spare bedroom when people drop by. This thing is sooooo nosisy that I will need to turn it off over night so they can get some sleep. Sure, they are performant. Sure, the NAS seeoms slightly more responsive (it is RAID 5) but .. I kida wish I'd bought WD's again. Never hear them. Nevvaaah!
J**Z
very good as used
got the used / mint condition by amazon, irowolf pro 8TB kinda wish the package said fragile or something but that;s the risk you take and amazon is good at returns. Here is what I got: Power-On Hours: Only 54 hours (practically new!) Power Cycles: 5 (barely used) Bad Sectors: 0 reallocated, 0 pending, 0 uncorrectable Errors: 0 read errors, 0 CRC errors Temperature: 33°C (healthy) enough said
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 week ago