- IT Office Moves
How to Keep Your Business Running During an Office Move
6 Jul, 2025







£647.45 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re buying the Kingston IronKey Vault for a reason—protecting sensitive client data, moving files between sites, or dealing with higher-risk environments—it’s one of the more sensible “don’t mess about” choices. The real value here isn’t just encryption as a buzzword; it’s the fact that it’s aimed at people who want an external drive that stays locked down by design and doesn’t rely on users doing the right thing every time. For a UK reseller buyer, that usually means legal firms, finance teams, HR departments, consultants who travel, and anyone handling regulated or high-value data who can’t afford “it was on a USB stick” moments.
At £542.64 ex-VAT, though, it’s not good value if you just want extra storage or occasional backups. You’re paying for a more controlled, security-first approach than you’d get from cheaper external SSDs, and you’ll feel that cost if your use case is low risk. I’d only recommend it if security policy, auditability, or actual threat exposure is part of the decision—not if the goal is simply faster file transfers. If that *is* your goal, it’s a strong buy; if not, you’ll likely be happier spending less on a mainstream encrypted SSD and putting effort into good access controls and device management.

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Vault Privacy 80 - SSD - encrypted - 7.68 TB - external (portable) - USB 3.2 Gen 1 (USB-C connector) - 256-bit AES-XTS, FIPS 197 - TAA Compliant

Samsung
Samsung T9 MU-PG4T0B - SSD - encrypted - 4 TB - external (portable) - USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 (USB-C connector) - 256-bit AES - black

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Vault Privacy 80 - SSD - encrypted - 3840 GB - external (portable) - USB 3.2 Gen 1 (USB-C connector) - 256-bit AES-XTS, FIPS 197 - TAA Compliant

Samsung
Samsung T7 MU-PC1T0H - SSD - encrypted - 1 TB - external (portable) - USB 3.2 Gen 2 (USB-C connector) - 256-bit AES - indigo blue