
Kingston NV3 500GB NVMe Gen4
500GB NVME GEN 4 SSD, 6000 MB/s read, DRAM-less (HMB).
Budget NVMe Gen4 — best-value entry point for NVMe. No DRAM cache but fast enough for OS + light gaming. HMB compensates. 5-year warranty.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Motherboards with M.2 slots
Where to buy Kingston NV3 500GB NVMe Gen4 in India
Expect to pay roughly ₹5,800-6,400 for the Kingston NV3 500GB NVMe Gen4 in India right now, depending on offers and seller. I always recommend buying from retailers that give a proper GST invoice - it's what makes your India warranty claim smooth later.
In my years running a PC store, PrimeABGB (Mumbai) and Vedant Computers (Kolkata) have also been consistently reliable for verified stock - compare before buying.
Kingston NV3 500GB NVMe Gen4 Review India - Tight Budget, Tight Capacity
Kingston NV3 500GB - Buy It Only If You Have a Specific Reason To
I'll be direct: the NV3 500GB is hard to recommend as a primary drive in 2025. Not because there's anything wrong with it as a product - it's a competent, fast budget Gen4 SSD. The problem is capacity.
500GB sounds like a lot until you install Windows 11 (30–40GB after updates), your browser, Discord, Steam, and one modern game. Call of Duty alone is 150GB. Baldur's Gate 3 is 150GB. Cyberpunk 2077 is 70GB. You'll hit the storage ceiling within weeks of a new build.
So why does this drive exist, and who actually needs it?
Speed Specs - Same Architecture, Smaller Cache
The NV3 500GB is rated at 3,500 MB/s sequential read and 2,100 MB/s sequential write - lower than the 1TB's 6,000/4,000 MB/s because the 500GB uses fewer NAND dies, which reduces parallelism. The SLC write cache is also smaller: roughly 20–30GB before dropping to native QLC speeds.
This means sustained write performance is more limited than even the NV3 1TB. For a pure OS boot drive with no large file transfers, this is fine. For installing games, moving data, or anything requiring sustained writes, the smaller cache limitation is more noticeable.
India Pricing - Cheap, But the 1TB Gap Is Small
The NV3 500GB runs ₹2,500–4,000 at MDComputers, Amazon India, Flipkart, and most local assemblers. The NV3 1TB is ₹1,500–2,000 more. That gap is small enough that for a primary drive, the 1TB is almost always the smarter buy.
The 500GB makes financial sense in one scenario: you're adding a secondary NVMe to a system that already has another drive, and the budget is strict. As a secondary cache or overflow drive alongside a 1TB primary, 500GB works without the capacity problem.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the NV3 500GB as a secondary drive alongside existing primary storage - a dedicated scratch disk, secondary game partition, or overflow storage. It's also a reasonable upgrade over a SATA SSD in a budget secondary slot.
Skip it as a primary drive in 2025. The extra ₹1,500–2,000 for the NV3 1TB is worth it - you'll regret the 500GB capacity within months. If you're truly on a strict budget and this is your only drive, at least plan for a second drive within six months.
Questions
No, not as a sole drive. Windows + basic apps eat 40–60GB. One or two modern AAA games fill another 150–300GB. You'll be constantly managing storage within weeks. The NV3 1TB at ₹1,500–2,000 more is the minimum I'd recommend for a gaming-focused primary drive.
NV2 1TB. More capacity, better write performance (higher write rating at 1TB), and similar or slightly higher pricing. The NV3 500GB is only preferable if it's significantly cheaper at your retailer and you genuinely don't need more than 500GB.
Yes - this is a legitimate config for very tight budgets. NVMe boot drive (fast Windows experience) + 1TB SATA HDD (₹3,000–4,000) for game storage. Older HDDs see 100–150 MB/s, which means longer game load times, but it keeps the budget down and the OS responsive.