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What Is a NAS? Network-Attached Storage Explained (2026)

A NAS is a small storage server on your own network — several disks, often in RAID, that every device can reach for backups, files and media. What a NAS is, how it works, what it's for, and the honest truth: RAID is not a backup.

By Eric Gerard · Éditeur · Save My Disk3 min readPhoto via Unsplash

You've outgrown USB drives and you want one place all your devices can back up to, stream from, and share — that's the job of a NAS. It's quietly become a home-tech staple, but it's also widely misunderstood, especially the dangerous myth that its RAID is a backup. This guide explains what a NAS is, how it works, how it compares to other storage, and the honest limits.

What a NAS is

A NAS (Network-Attached Storage) is a dedicated storage device that plugs into your network rather than a single computer. It holds one or more hard drives — often combined in RAID — and makes that storage available to every device on the network for backups, file sharing and media.

In effect, it's your own private storage server: always on, reachable from any device, and (configured carefully) accessible over the internet. Synology and QNAP are the best-known brands.

Server racks in a data center
Server racks in a data center

How it works

A NAS is a small, low-power computer with its own OS, a network port, and bays for drives. You install disks, configure them (commonly a RAID array), and it shares the storage over your network via standard protocols (SMB, NFS) so devices see it as a network folder.

Most units add apps: automatic backups, a media server (Plex/Jellyfin), photo sync, even a personal cloud you reach remotely. It runs 24/7, so the storage is always available.

Hard drives on a desk
Hard drives on a desk

NAS vs external drive vs cloud

  • External drive — one computer at a time over USB. Simple, cheap, single-disk.
  • NAS — serves your whole network, many devices at once, multiple disks with RAID and apps. More capable, pricier, more to manage.
  • Cloud — files on a provider's servers, reachable anywhere, ongoing fees, third-party trust.

Most people combine them: a NAS for local capacity, plus a cloud or offsite copy for disaster protection.

The myth that loses data: RAID is not a backup

This is the single most important point. RAID protects against one disk dying — the NAS keeps running while you replace it. But RAID does not protect against:

  • Accidental deletion or file corruption
  • Ransomware (which encrypts everything the NAS can write — see Synology/QNAP NAS ransomware recovery)
  • Theft, fire, power surges, or a failure that takes the whole unit down

All of those hit every disk at once. RAID is uptime, not backup. Keep a separate copy, ideally offsite or in the cloud — the 3-2-1 rule (3 copies, 2 media, 1 offsite).

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If a NAS does lose data — a deleted share, a corrupted volume, a RAID that won't mount — stop writing to it and run recovery; see external hard drive recovery and the best data recovery software of 2026.

The bottom line

A NAS is a private, always-on storage server for your network — excellent for central backups, media and file sharing across all your devices, and far more capable than a single external drive. Just never mistake its RAID for a backup: it guards uptime, not your data against deletion, ransomware or disaster. Run the NAS, and keep one separate, offsite copy as well.

Editorial guide based on how NAS devices and RAID work, and standard backup practice (3-2-1). Commercial links carry the rel="sponsored nofollow" attribute; an affiliate commission may apply at no extra cost to you.

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