# Toshiba denies warranty replacement for enterprise hard drive, offers refund at outdated price

_Sunday, April 19, 2026 at 8:14 AM EDT · Tech & Business, Infrastructure · Latest · Tier 2 — Notable_

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Toshiba has refused to honor a warranty replacement for a failed 20+ terabyte enterprise hard drive, instead offering a refund at the drive's original purchase price. The customer would need to acquire a replacement at current market rates, which have climbed significantly since the initial purchase.

According to documents reviewed by Tom's Hardware, Toshiba declined the warranty claim citing insufficient stock and a potential one-year wait for a replacement 24TB model. The company where the drive was installed purchased multiple high-capacity drives months ago for a storage array before one unit failed.

The refund-at-purchase-price policy presents a financial challenge for customers amid ongoing component shortages. Hard drive and memory prices have risen sharply due to artificial intelligence infrastructure demand, making replacement hardware more expensive than the refund amount would cover.

Similar issues are emerging across the storage and memory sector. Another user reported that Silicon Power charged a 15% depreciation fee for returning defective RAM modules. With 8GB DDR5 memory sticks now costing over $200 compared to less than $55 before the shortage, the refunded amount falls short of current market prices.

Industry observers suggest manufacturers may be liquidating safety stock or experiencing higher-than-expected failure rates in certain product lines. "I'm guessing they saw dollar signs from the AI bubble and sold off their safety stock or are seeing an unusually high failure rate in those drives," one commenter noted.

The situation highlights how warranty terms drafted during periods of stable pricing can become inadequate when market conditions shift rapidly. Enterprise buyers typically consider reliability and manufacturer support alongside purchase price, making warranty fulfillment a critical component of total cost of ownership.

As AI-driven demand continues to pressure component supplies, manufacturers and customers alike face difficult decisions regarding product support and replacement policies in a volatile market.

## Sources

- [Tom's Hardware](https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/hdds/toshiba-refuses-to-replace-large-hard-drives-under-warranty-the-company-offers-refunds-at-the-purchase-price-not-the-post-shortage-price)

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Canonical: https://techandbusiness.org/newswire/08EUFJXk3wQgRnqiFIiWKU
Retrieved: 2026-04-19T16:22:27.627Z
Publisher: Tech & Business (techandbusiness.org)
