QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 NAS Revealed at Computex 2026
New QNAP TS-h465 and TS-h265 NAS Revealed (the Actual TS-464 Refresh!)
At Computex 2026, QNAP has revealed the TS-h265 and TS-h465, a new 2-bay and 4-bay NAS series that appears to move the company’s mainstream desktop range beyond the older TS-264 and TS-464 generation. Those earlier models became familiar options for home users, prosumers and small office deployments, largely because they balanced compact hardware, multimedia support, network expandability and QNAP’s wider software ecosystem at a relatively accessible price point. With the TS-h265 and TS-h465, QNAP seems to be revisiting that same part of the market, but with a more modern platform and a broader software direction that includes both QTS and QuTS hero. Full specifications are still being confirmed at the show, but the initial information points to a meaningful refresh rather than a minor casing revision.
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QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Hardware Specifications
The TS-h265 and TS-h465 are being positioned as the 2-bay and 4-bay successors to the TS-264 and TS-464 class of NAS, but the hardware direction is now clearer with confirmation of the Intel N150 processor. This is a newer quad-core Intel platform with integrated Intel graphics, replacing the older Celeron N5095/N5105 generation used in the TS-x64 family. The N150 keeps these systems in the same broad home, prosumer and small office category, but brings the platform forward with a more current low-power CPU design, updated media handling, newer memory support and a more modern I/O foundation.
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Memory is another important part of the refresh. The older TS-264 and TS-464 used DDR4 memory, whereas the TS-h265 and TS-h465 move to DDR5 SODIMM memory with expansion support. This matters for a few reasons, not just because DDR5 is newer. These systems are also being built to support both QTS and QuTS hero, and QuTS hero’s ZFS-based storage environment can benefit from greater memory headroom, especially when snapshots, caching behaviour, metadata handling and heavier multi-user workloads are involved. QNAP has not yet confirmed all retail memory configurations, but the move to expandable DDR5 gives the new series a more suitable foundation for a longer product cycle.
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Storage remains based around standard SATA drive bays, with the TS-h265 providing 2 bays and the TS-h465 providing 4 bays. That keeps the core identity of the range familiar, as these are still compact desktop NAS systems designed around hard drive capacity first, rather than flash-only storage. However, both models also include 2 x M.2 2280 PCIe SSD slots, which can be used for SSD caching or faster SSD-based storage pools, depending on the operating system and storage configuration selected. This continues QNAP’s push toward hybrid HDD and SSD setups in mainstream NAS hardware, allowing users to combine larger SATA storage with faster flash-based acceleration or application storage.
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Connectivity also follows a practical refresh of the previous TS-x64 approach, with a stronger supporting platform around it. The TS-h265 and TS-h465 include dual 2.5GbE networking as standard, giving users a solid starting point for multi-client access, SMB Multichannel or link aggregation depending on the wider network environment. QNAP is also retaining PCIe expansion at the rear of the chassis, which is important because it gives users a path to 10GbE RJ45 networking without needing to step up into a more expensive NAS family. Alongside this, the systems include USB-A and USB-C connectivity at 10Gb/s, plus HDMI output driven by the integrated Intel graphics, keeping local display, multimedia and VM display use cases in scope for this refresh.
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QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Software Specifications
The main software distinction with the TS-h265 and TS-h465 is that QNAP is not limiting these systems to the standard QTS platform in the way the TS-264 and TS-464 were when they launched in 2022/2023 – QNAP has since allowed the QuTS ZFS OS to be installed on these older systems, but most users are already firmly bedded in on their OS, and upgrading requires a full system reset., plus the Intel Celeron N5105/n5095A chip wasn’t quite powerful enough to make the most ZFS in the way modern Intel Alder lake and Twin lake processors do. These models are being presented with support for both QTS and QuTS hero, giving users the option of deploying the NAS around the more traditional EXT4-based QNAP environment or the ZFS-based QuTS hero platform. For buyers looking at increased data integrity, snapshots, compression and more structured storage behaviour that the zetabyte film system provides over the EXT4 offering, this gives the new 2-bay and 4-bay range a broader role than the previous generation.
Another notable software change is the arrival of Qtier hero, bringing QNAP’s automated tiering approach into the QuTS hero environment. Qtier was previously associated with QTS, allowing frequently accessed data to be moved to faster SSD storage while colder data remained on larger HDD volumes. With QuTS hero h6.0, QNAP is extending this idea to ZFS-based systems, where HDD and SSD storage can be used in a more deliberate tiered structure. On a NAS such as the TS-h265 or TS-h465, this could be useful for users who want to combine larger SATA hard drives with faster M.2 SSDs, especially for mixed workloads involving file sharing, application data, active project folders, photo indexing or small business storage.
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QTS remains the more familiar option for many home users, small offices and multimedia-focused buyers. It provides access to QNAP’s broader app ecosystem, including storage pool management, snapshots, user and folder controls, Hybrid Backup Sync, multimedia applications, container tools, virtualisation support and general file sharing services. For users moving from an older QNAP system, QTS is also likely to be the more straightforward path, particularly if their priority is Plex, Jellyfin, photo management, backup jobs, surveillance, sync tasks or general network storage. In that sense, the TS-h265 and TS-h465 still retain the mainstream usability that helped make the TS-x64 generation popular, while adding a second operating system path for those who want ZFS.
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The timing also lines up with QNAP’s wider QuTS hero h6.0 push. The latest QuTS hero platform is being developed around features such as immutable snapshots, improved security controls, ransomware protection, KMIP key management support, FIDO2 login support, improved SMB handling and more centralized management options. Not every enterprise-oriented function will necessarily be equally relevant to a 2-bay or 4-bay desktop NAS, and some features may depend on final hardware support or deployment type, but the direction is clear. QNAP is trying to bring more of its ZFS and business-focused software stack into smaller NAS systems, while still leaving QTS available for users who want the lighter and more familiar setup.
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QNAP TS-h265 and TS-h465 Price and Availability
QNAP has not yet confirmed final pricing for the TS-h265 and TS-h465, but the current expectation is that availability will begin in Q3 2026. As these models appear to refresh the same general product position previously held by the TS-264 and TS-464, the most direct reference point is the launch pricing of those earlier systems, which sat around $399 for the 2-bay model and $599 for the 4-bay model. However, it would be premature to assume the new systems will arrive at exactly the same level. Component costs have changed since the 2022/2023 generation, hardware supply remains affected by wider AI-driven demand, inflation has increased pressure on electronics pricing, and these are full turnkey NAS systems with a mature software platform rather than barebones storage boxes. For that reason, a price increase over the older TS-x64 launch figures would not be surprising, although final regional pricing, memory configurations and launch bundles still need to be confirmed by QNAP.
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