Storage · 7 min read

What Is a NAS, and Do You Actually Need One at Home?

It's not as complicated as it sounds, and for the right household, it solves a real problem cloud storage can't.

NAS stands for network-attached storage — in plain terms, it's a small dedicated device that holds hard drives and connects to your home network, so every computer, phone, and TV in the house can access the same files without needing a subscription or an internet connection to do it.

What it actually does

Think of it as your own private cloud, sitting in a closet instead of in a data center somewhere. A NAS can:

  • Automatically back up photos and files from every phone and computer in the house
  • Stream your own movie and TV collection to any TV or device, like a private Netflix
  • Give everyone in the family access to the same shared files without emailing attachments back and forth
  • Keep working even if your internet goes down, since the files live on your network, not someone else's server
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How it's different from cloud storage

Services like iCloud, Google Photos, and Dropbox are convenient, but you're renting the storage — the moment you stop paying, access changes. You're also trusting a third party with everything you upload, and larger storage tiers add up to a real monthly cost over time.

A NAS is a one-time hardware purchase. You own the drives, you own the data, and there's no recurring bill for the storage itself (though some people also pair a NAS with a small cloud backup for extra safety — more on that below).

Who actually benefits from one

A NAS makes the most sense for households or small businesses that fit at least one of these:

  • You've got a lot of photos and video — especially from multiple family members — and you're tired of paying for cloud storage tiers that keep creeping up.
  • You want real backups, not just hope. If your family's only copy of ten years of photos lives on one laptop, a NAS (with proper backup habits) fixes that.
  • You run a small business and need a shared drive that multiple employees or computers can access without paying for per-seat cloud storage.
  • You have a media collection you'd like to stream to your own TVs without relying on a streaming service's library.

If you mostly live in Google Photos or iCloud already and that works fine for your needs, a NAS might be more infrastructure than you actually need. It's a genuinely useful tool, not a must-have for everyone.

RAID, in one paragraph

Most NAS devices hold two or more hard drives, and RAID is simply a way of arranging those drives so that if one fails, your data survives. It is not a backup by itself — it protects against a drive failure, not against theft, fire, or accidentally deleting a file. A proper setup uses RAID for day-to-day protection and a separate backup (often an offsite or cloud copy) for real disaster protection. That's usually summarized as the "3-2-1 rule": three copies of your data, on two different types of storage, with one copy stored somewhere else entirely.

Getting started

A basic two-drive NAS with a modest amount of storage is enough for most households to get real value — automatic phone backups, a shared family drive, and simple media streaming. Sizing it correctly (drive capacity, RAID setup, and network configuration) is where people most often either overspend or under-protect their data, so it's worth getting right the first time rather than guessing.

Want a NAS set up right the first time?

McCoy Home Tech sizes and configures NAS systems for automatic backup, media streaming, and secure remote access — for homes and small businesses in Central PA.

See NAS setup pricing →