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Aujourd’hui — 3 juin 2026Flux principal

UGREEN DXP4800GT NAS Revealed at Computex 2026 (and it ISN’T CHINA ONLY))

Par : Rob Andrews
3 juin 2026 à 11:55

UGREEN’s AMD 4-Bay NAS Goes Global

At Computex 2026, UGREEN revealed the DXP4800GT, a new 4-bay NAS that takes the company’s desktop NAS lineup in a different direction from the Intel-powered DXP models already on the market. I first discussed this NAS a week ago when it appeared through UGREEN’s China-facing material, and at the time the obvious question was whether it would remain a China-only release. Having now seen it at the UGREEN stand in Taipei, I am pleased to see that this model is intended for wider availability, including both the US and Europe.

The DXP4800GT is not just another small update to the existing DXP4800 range. It moves to an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor, adds dual 10GbE networking, keeps the 4-bay desktop form factor, and includes several features that make it more appealing to creators, small teams, and heavier home users. I would still describe it as a NAS first, rather than a mini PC with drive bays, but the hardware layout clearly gives it more room for Docker, virtual machines, faster local transfers, media handling, and heavier multi-user workloads than a basic entry-level NAS.

Specification UGREEN DXP4800GT
Product type 4-bay desktop NAS
Processor AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514
CPU cores / threads 4 cores / 8 threads
CPU architecture x86
CPU frequency 2.1GHz to 3.7GHz
Process 12nm
Integrated graphics Radeon Vega 8
Standard memory 8GB or 16GB DDR4
Memory slots 2
Maximum memory 64GB
Maximum memory frequency 2666 MT/s
ECC memory support Supported with compatible ECC memory upgrade
Included ECC memory No, built-in memory does not support ECC
System storage 64GB eMMC flash
Main drive bays 4
Main drive interface SATA 3.0
Drive support 2.5-inch / 3.5-inch SATA drives
Maximum SATA capacity 32TB x 4
M.2 slots 2
M.2 type M-key
M.2 protocol NVMe
M.2 form factor 2280
Maximum M.2 capacity 8TB x 2
Advertised maximum total capacity 144TB
U.2 support Referenced by UGREEN for main drive bays
Network ports 2 x 10GbE
Wi-Fi Not listed
Front USB 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, 1 x USB-C Gen 2
Rear USB 1 x USB 3.2 Gen 1, 2 x USB 2.0
SD card slot SD 3.0
HDMI HDMI 2.0b, up to 4K at 60Hz
PCIe expansion Not listed
Thunderbolt 4 Not listed
Drive tray child lock Supported
Desktop device lock Not listed
Chassis material Aerospace-grade aluminium
Cooling Through-flow internal design with 14cm fan
Expected release regions US and Europe
Expected release timing Q2 2026, likely mid-to-late June 2026
Expected launch price $600 to $700, likely with launch special pricing

A Desktop NAS Chassis with More Storage Flexibility

The DXP4800GT keeps the familiar 4-bay desktop NAS layout, but UGREEN has given this model a more distinctive chassis than many systems in this class. The official material describes an aerospace-grade aluminium casing, a 3.5mm thickened metal body, a through-flow internal cooling structure, and a 14cm silent hydraulic fan. There is also a child lock on the drive trays, which is a small but practical feature if the NAS is being used in a shared office, studio, or family environment rather than locked away in a cupboard. The version shown in the launch material uses a black and rose-gold style finish, which also helps separate it visually from the standard DXP4800 models.

For storage, the DXP4800GT combines 4 SATA bays, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, and 64GB of eMMC flash storage listed for the system. The main SATA bays support 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch drives, with UGREEN listing up to 32TB per bay, giving the 4 main bays a maximum of 128TB. The 2 M.2 2280 NVMe slots are listed at up to 8TB each, taking the advertised total supported capacity to 144TB. UGREEN also refers to U.2 expansion support through the main drive bays, which is one of the more interesting details, although I would still want to verify the exact implementation, supported drive types, and bandwidth behaviour in proper testing before treating that as a fully understood feature.

AMD Hardware, ECC Potential, and Dual 10GbE

Inside the DXP4800GT is an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor. This is a 4-core, 8-thread x86 CPU with a listed clock range of 2.1GHz to 3.7GHz, and it includes Radeon Vega 8 integrated graphics. That makes it a different kind of NAS from the Intel N100-based DXP4800, particularly for users who care about running several services at the same time. UGREEN’s own material claims a 20.6% multi-core performance improvement over the DXP4800 and highlights the move from 4 threads to 8 threads, though I would still treat those as vendor figures until I can test the system independently.

The memory configuration is also worth noting. The DXP4800GT is listed with either 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 memory as standard, with 2 memory slots and support for up to 64GB at 2666 MT/s. UGREEN also states that ECC memory is supported, but there is an important detail in the product material: the included memory does not support ECC, and users need to replace it with compatible ECC memory to enable that function. That distinction matters, because a NAS being ECC-capable is not the same thing as shipping with ECC active out of the box.

Networking is one of the clearest areas where the GT model steps up. The DXP4800GT includes 2 10GbE ports, while UGREEN’s existing DXP4800 Plus uses a 10GbE plus 2.5GbE layout, and the standard DXP4800 uses dual 2.5GbE. UGREEN’s own material also refers to aggregation and bridge modes, with the bridge option allowing a 10GbE device to connect directly through the NAS without necessarily needing a dedicated 10GbE switch. In practice, actual speeds will still depend on the drives, RAID configuration, SSD use, network setup, cables, and client hardware, but dual 10GbE is a strong baseline for a 4-bay system.

The external ports are also fairly complete. The front of the DXP4800GT includes 1 USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port, 1 USB-C Gen 2 port, and an SD 3.0 card slot. Around the rear, there is 1 USB 3.2 Gen 1 port, 2 USB 2.0 ports, HDMI 2.0b with support for up to 4K at 60Hz, and the 2 10GbE ports. For creators, the SD card slot and faster networking are the most obvious practical benefits, because they make it easier to ingest camera media and then work from centralised storage across a fast local network.

UGOS Pro, AI Features, and Everyday NAS Use

UGREEN is presenting the DXP4800GT as a system for more than basic file storage. Its official material highlights UGOS Pro support for Docker, virtual machines, photo management, semantic image search, media library tools, cloud storage mounting, Time Machine backup, snapshots, RAID, 2FA, encrypted remote access, firewall controls, and fine-grained permissions. These are all useful features on paper, but I would separate the mature NAS basics from the newer AI-driven tools, because the latter need more real-world testing before they can be judged properly.

The photo and media features are clearly part of how UGREEN wants to position this model. The official material refers to semantic image search, people recognition, text recognition, duplicate photo recognition, pet recognition, sensitive content identification, and AI-assisted media organisation. For newer NAS users, the appeal is easy to understand: instead of just storing a large photo archive, the NAS is supposed to help make that archive easier to browse and search. My main question is not whether these features sound useful, but how consistently they work, how much local processing is involved, and how well UGOS Pro presents them to users who do not want to spend time tuning a server.

DXP4800GT vs DXP4800 Plus vs DXP4800

The DXP4800GT sits in an interesting place against the existing DXP4800 and DXP4800 Plus. The standard DXP4800 uses an Intel N100 processor and dual 2.5GbE, so it is the more mainstream option for users who want a 4-bay NAS for backup, media storage, and lighter home use. The DXP4800 Plus steps up to an Intel Pentium Gold 8505 processor, DDR5 memory, and a 10GbE plus 2.5GbE network layout, making it better suited to faster file transfers and heavier multitasking. The DXP4800GT changes the formula again by using an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 with 4 cores and 8 threads, DDR4 memory, ECC upgrade support, and dual 10GbE.

Specification UGREEN DXP4800

UGREEN DXP4800 Plus

UGREEN DXP4800GT

Buy $499.99 (Amazon)

$659.99 (UGREEN STORE)

$676.99 (Amazon)

$659.99 (UGREEN STORE)

$600-700
CPU Intel N100 Intel Pentium Gold 8505 AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514
CPU cores / threads 4 cores / 4 threads 5 cores / 6 threads 4 cores / 8 threads
CPU architecture x86 x86 x86
Integrated graphics Intel UHD Graphics Intel UHD Graphics Radeon Vega 8
Standard memory 8GB DDR5 8GB DDR5 8GB or 16GB DDR4
Maximum memory Up to 16GB or 32GB, depending on region/listing Up to 64GB Up to 64GB
ECC support Not listed Not listed Supported with compatible ECC memory upgrade
Main storage bays 4 SATA bays 4 SATA bays 4 SATA bays
M.2 slots 2 x M.2 NVMe 2 x M.2 NVMe 2 x M.2 NVMe
U.2 support Not listed Not listed Referenced by UGREEN for main drive bays
Advertised max capacity Commonly listed up to 112TB Commonly listed up to 136TB Up to 144TB
System storage 32GB eMMC on common retail listings 128GB SSD on common retail listings 64GB eMMC
Network ports 2 x 2.5GbE 1 x 10GbE, 1 x 2.5GbE 2 x 10GbE
HDMI 4K HDMI 4K HDMI HDMI 2.0b, up to 4K at 60Hz
Front removable media SD card reader, depending on listing SD card reader SD 3.0 card reader
General positioning Mainstream 4-bay home NAS Faster prosumer 4-bay NAS AMD-based 10GbE creator / heavier-use 4-bay NAS

On CPU ability, the comparison is not as simple as newer always being better in every way. The Intel N100 in the DXP4800 is efficient and well suited to lighter NAS duties, while the Pentium Gold 8505 in the DXP4800 Plus offers a stronger mixed-core Intel platform for more demanding desktop NAS use. The Ryzen Embedded R2514 in the DXP4800GT brings 8 threads, ECC memory potential, and Radeon Vega 8 integrated graphics, which gives it a different profile again. For users focused on multitasking, virtual machines, Docker, direct 10GbE use, and longer-term service workloads, the GT model looks like the more specialised performance NAS. For users focused on lower cost or simpler home storage, the standard DXP4800 or DXP4800 Plus may still make more sense.

Alternatively, you can also make comparisons between the DXP4800 Pro too – a NAS released around 3-4 months ago that features a near identical hardware configuration to the DXP4800 PLUS, but arrives with an Intel i3 Processor. Here is how those processors compare below:

US and Europe Release Plans

The DXP4800GT is not being treated as a China-only NAS. UGREEN has confirmed to me that the model is being revealed at Computex 2026 and is planned for release in both the US and Europe in Q2 2026. In practical terms, that points to a likely mid-to-late June 2026 release window, assuming the final retail schedule does not slip. That matters because when this model first appeared through Chinese product material, the obvious uncertainty was whether this AMD-based version would be sold internationally at all.

DXP4800GT Price and Launch Position

UGREEN has indicated that the DXP4800GT will launch in the $600 to $700 range, with a launch special price likely. That places it above a basic 4-bay NAS, but the hardware package is also stronger than a basic 4-bay system, especially with the AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514, dual 10GbE, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, 64GB eMMC system storage, HDMI, SD card access, and support for up to 64GB of memory. The final value judgement will depend on the confirmed retail price, the included memory configuration, regional warranty details, and how mature UGOS Pro feels on this AMD hardware at launch. Based on the specification and the newly confirmed global release plan, the DXP4800GT is now more than an interesting China-market reveal. It is one of UGREEN’s key NAS launches for mid-2026.

Look for the UGREEN DXP4800GT on Amazon Check the Official UGREEN Store for the DXP4800GT on UGREEN.COM Buy a UGREEN NAS on B&H

STORE

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À partir d’avant-hierFlux principal

UGREEN DXP4800GT NAS Revealed

Par : Rob Andrews
22 mai 2026 à 18:02

A New AMD Direction for UGREEN NAS – the DXP4800GT NAS

The UGREEN DXP4800 GT is a newly revealed 4-bay NAS that, at least for now, appears to be aimed at the Chinese market. It sits in the same broad family as UGREEN’s existing DXP4800 systems, but it takes the hardware in a different direction by moving away from the Intel processors used in much of the current NASync range and instead using an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 platform. That matters because this is not just a slightly adjusted version of the earlier DXP4800, but a model that appears to be built around higher network throughput, stronger multi-threaded performance, and a more capable internal hardware layout. For users who have been watching UGREEN’s NAS range develop over the last year, this feels like a separate branch of the product line rather than a simple replacement.

I would not look at the DXP4800 GT as just another 4-bay storage box with a new colour scheme. The early specifications point toward a more performance-focused NAS, with dual 10GbE, 4 SATA bays, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, ECC memory support through compatible upgrades, and 64GB of eMMC system storage listed in the official specifications. It also appears to be aimed at users who want more than basic backup duties, including media handling, Docker, virtual machines, photo management, and faster direct network access. That does not automatically make it the right NAS for everyone, and there are still details that need confirming, especially around wider availability, final pricing, and how flexible the system will be for users who want to experiment with software. However, based on what has been shown so far, it is clearly a model worth separating from the standard DXP4800 line.

UGREEN DXP4800GT NAS – Design and Storage

The DXP4800 GT keeps to a 4-bay desktop NAS layout, but UGREEN appears to be putting more emphasis on the physical design than just the internal specification sheet. The official material describes an aerospace-grade aluminium casing, with a thicker metal body, a large 14cm fan, and a through-flow internal cooling design. There is also a child lock on the hard drive trays, which is a small detail, but useful if the NAS is going to sit somewhere accessible rather than hidden away in a network cabinet. The model shown in the launch material also uses a black and rose-gold style finish, which is more visually distinctive than most 4-bay NAS systems, although final regional colour options have not been confirmed.

On the storage side, the DXP4800 GT is not just relying on its 4 main SATA bays. Each bay supports 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch SATA drives, with the official specification listing up to 32TB per bay, giving the system a stated SATA capacity of 128TB before the M.2 slots are included. The NAS also has 2 M.2 NVMe 2280 slots, with up to 8TB per slot listed, bringing the total advertised maximum to 144TB. One of the more interesting details from the official product text is the mention of U.2 expansion support through the main drive bays, which could make the system more flexible for users who want higher-performance SSD storage, though the exact implementation and limitations still need proper confirmation in testing.

UGREEN DXP4800GT – Internal Hardware and External Connectivity

Inside the DXP4800 GT, the main change is the move to an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor. This is a 4-core, 8-thread x86 CPU with a listed frequency range of 2.1GHz to 3.7GHz, and it also includes Radeon Vega 8 integrated graphics. That makes it quite different from the Intel N100 used in the standard DXP4800, especially for users who care about heavier multitasking, virtual machines, Docker containers, and services running at the same time. UGREEN’s own comparison material claims a multi-core performance uplift over the DXP4800, though I would treat that as a useful early indicator rather than a replacement for independent testing.

Memory is another area where the DXP4800 GT looks more flexible than a basic home NAS. The official specifications list 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 memory as standard, with 2 memory slots and support for up to 64GB at 2666 MT/s. The product material also states that the platform supports ECC memory, but the included memory does not support ECC, so users would need to replace it with compatible ECC modules to use that feature. That distinction matters, because ECC support is often mentioned loosely in NAS marketing, but whether the system actually ships with ECC memory is a separate point.Note – it appears on the official China sales page that the DXP4800GT is shipping by default with either 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 3200MT/s RAM, but not not ECC RAM. It IS supported, but needs to be purchased seperately.

Networking is one of the clearest hardware upgrades. The DXP4800 GT includes 2 10GbE ports rather than the 2.5GbE ports found on the earlier DXP4800 model, and UGREEN’s material refers to aggregation and bridge modes for different network setups. For a 4-bay NAS, dual 10GbE is a strong specification, especially for users moving large video projects, working from SSD storage, or connecting directly to a 10GbE workstation without immediately needing a switch. Of course, the actual speeds will still depend on the drives used, the RAID configuration, the client device, and the rest of the network, so the ports alone do not guarantee 10Gb/s file transfers in every setup.

The external ports are also fairly broad for a desktop NAS. The front includes 1 USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port, 1 USB-C Gen 2 port, and an SD 3.0 card reader, while the rear includes 1 USB 3.2 Gen 1 port, 2 USB 2.0 ports, HDMI 2.0b with support for up to 4K at 60Hz, and the 2 10GbE network ports. The SD card slot is particularly relevant for photographers and video creators who want quick ingest after a shoot, while HDMI gives the system more flexibility for direct display use or local media output, depending on how UGREEN enables it in UGOS Pro. The listed 64GB of flash storage also suggests the operating system has its own onboard space, though I would still want to confirm how accessible or replaceable that storage is before drawing conclusions about third-party OS use.

Elephant in the room – DXP4800GT is China Only …for now?

For now, the DXP4800 GT appears to be a China-first product rather than a confirmed global release. The official material and early product information are focused on the Chinese UGREEN NAS site, and there has not yet been a clear international launch date, regional price, or confirmed global SKU. That is worth keeping in mind, because UGREEN’s NAS lineup can differ by region, and features shown in Chinese launch material do not always arrive in exactly the same form elsewhere. I would not assume the final global version, if it appears, will be identical in colour, bundled memory, app support, or software services.

That said, I would be surprised if this hardware platform remained China-only forever. The DXP4800 GT uses a noticeably different AMD-based architecture from the Intel-powered DXP models already sold more widely, and it includes features that would make sense for a broader prosumer NAS audience, especially dual 10GbE, higher memory support, ECC upgrade potential, and a more performance-focused storage layout. The more realistic question is not whether the hardware is interesting enough for wider release, but whether UGREEN chooses to bring this exact model outside China or uses the same platform as the basis for a later international NAS. Until that is confirmed, it should be treated as a revealed product rather than a globally available one.

An Early Verdict on the DXP4800 GT

The UGREEN DXP4800 GT looks like a more serious 4-bay NAS than the standard DXP4800, mainly because it combines an AMD Ryzen Embedded R2514 processor, dual 10GbE, expandable DDR4 memory, 2 M.2 NVMe slots, HDMI, SD card access, and a higher-end chassis design in a single desktop system. From the information currently available, I would treat it as a NAS aimed more at creators, heavier home users, homelab users, and small teams than someone who only wants basic file backup. The remaining unknowns are important, especially global availability, price, third-party OS flexibility, and real-world thermal and network performance. Until those are confirmed, this is best viewed as a promising hardware reveal rather than a finished recommendation, but it is still one of the more interesting UGREEN NAS models shown so far.

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Finally, for free advice about your setup, just leave a message in the comments below here at NASCompares.com and we will get back to you. Need Help? Where possible (and where appropriate) please provide as much information about your requirements, as then I can arrange the best answer and solution to your needs. Do not worry about your e-mail address being required, it will NOT be used in a mailing list and will NOT be used in any way other than to respond to your enquiry. [contact-form-7] TRY CHAT Terms and Conditions
If you like this service, please consider supporting us. We use affiliate links on the blog allowing NAScompares information and advice service to be free of charge to you.Anything you purchase on the day you click on our links will generate a small commission which isused to run the website. Here is a link for Amazon and B&H.You can also get me a ☕ Ko-fi or old school Paypal. Thanks!To find out more about how to support this advice service check HEREIf you need to fix or configure a NAS, check Fiver Have you thought about helping others with your knowledge? Find Instructions Here  
 
Or support us by using our affiliate links on Amazon UK and Amazon US
    
 
Alternatively, why not ask me on the ASK NASCompares forum, by clicking the button below. This is a community hub that serves as a place that I can answer your question, chew the fat, share new release information and even get corrections posted. I will always get around to answering ALL queries, but as a one-man operation, I cannot promise speed! So by sharing your query in the ASK NASCompares section below, you can get a better range of solutions and suggestions, alongside my own.

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