RAID 6 vs RAID 10 — 4×12 TB

You have 4 drives of 12 TB (48 TB raw) and are deciding between RAID 6 (double parity — two drives may fail) and RAID 10 (striped mirrors — fast, one failure per mirror pair). The table shows what each choice actually gives you.

MetricRAID 6RAID 10
Usable capacity24 TB24 TB
Redundancy overhead24 TB24 TB
Storage efficiency50%50%
Fault tolerance (drives)21+
Minimum drives44

Both give the same usable capacity on this configuration — the decision is about failure behavior, not space.

RAID 6 survives more simultaneous drive failures — with 4 drives of 12 TB, rebuild windows are long, and that margin is what saves the array when a second drive acts up mid-rebuild.

With drives of 8 TB and larger, single-parity rebuilds carry measurable URE risk — check yours in the rebuild calculator.

See it live

Open this exact configuration in the calculator and tweak drives, sizes and levels freely.

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