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Umbrel Pro

16TB home cloud server. Run OpenClaw, store files, and more.

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Home cloud server with 4 NVMe SSD slots for up to 16TB storage. Milled from a single block of aluminum and framed with American Walnut. Powered by umbrelOS - run OpenClaw, Immich (photo/video backups), and hundreds of self-hosted apps with one click.

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Hi Product Hunt! 👋

I’m Mayank, one of the founders of Umbrel.

The story:

5 years ago, we started building umbrelOS to make running a home server accessible to everyone. 3 years ago, we launched the Umbrel Home - our first plug-and-play home cloud server.

But users kept asking for three things: more power, more storage, and RAID (so no data loss even if an SSD fails).

Last week, we launched our dream hardware: Umbrel Pro.

Who is this for?

  • You've been considering a NAS but don't want something big, loud, and bulky with the UI and industrial design of the 2010s.

  • You're paying for iCloud or Google Photos and it bugs you that your photos live on a company's servers that can lock you out anytime.

  • You've been eyeing a Mac Mini for OpenClaw but dedicating a whole Mac to one thing feels off. Umbrel Pro can run OpenClaw alongside 300 other self-hosted apps, all on something purposefully built to stay on 24/7 with negligible power draw.

  • You've been meaning to set up Plex to stream 4K movies to your TV, or Home Assistant for home automation, but the setup always felt like a hassle. With umbrelOS, it's one click.

One purchase, no subscriptions, and you own all your data.

The industrial design:
We mill the chassis from a single solid block of aluminum, sandblast and anodize it to a deep matte black finish, and frame it with real American Walnut wood.

We posted a behind-the-scenes video of how it's manufactured if you want to geek out on the machining.

Powered by umbrelOS:
No keyboard or display required. Just open umbrel.local on any browser on the same network and start dropping your files in. You can also add it Dropbox-style as a network folder on Mac/Windows, or even on your phone.

The Umbrel App Store has hundreds of apps, like OpenClaw, Bitcoin Node, Immich (self-hosted Google Photos), Plex/Jellyfin, Ollama, Nextcloud, and more - all one-click install.

Specs:

  • 4x NVMe SSD slots: Magnetic lid, no-tool SSD swaps, up to 16TB.

  • 2.5GbE LAN: Fast enough to edit 4K footage directly off of it.

  • 8-Core Intel Core i3-N300, 16GB LPDDR5 RAM.

  • FailSafe Mode: You can start with 1 SSD and add more later to enable RAID. Powered by ZFS.

  • Whisper quiet: The entire magnetic lid acts as a heatsink for the SSDs and you can barely ever hear the fan.

Umbrel Pro is shipping worldwide now, and you can order it on our website (from $699 / 599 € / £529).


We'd love your feedback! If you've got any questions regarding the hardware or the software, our team will be hanging out in the comments all day!

Comment highlights

Simply a beautiful piece of Industrial Design - excellent work.

Love that you're solving the biggest barrier to self-hosting: the interface. It finally looks like a consumer product rather than a sysadmin tool! Quick question: Are there plans to open up the ecosystem more for developers who find the current setup a bit too 'walled garden'? Excited to see how the platform stability evolves!

Umbrel strikes a rare balance between simplicity and power — true plug-and-play self-hosting, a clean OS experience, and serious storage with ZFS. It’s a thoughtful home cloud for people who want to own their data without turning setup into a project.

Finally, a home server that’s peaceful, sleek, and actually usable. Umbrel Pro feels next-level. 🙌

Umbrel Pro looks amazing! Great to see a home cloud with 4 NVMe slots, built‑in RAID, and support for hundreds of self‑hosted apps with no subscriptions.  🔧 The ability to start with a single SSD and expand later is very convenient.

Been running Ollama on a Mac Mini for local inference, and the always-on tax is real. Dedicating a whole machine to serve a couple models feels wasteful when it sits idle 80% of the day. Umbrel Pro with 4 NVMe slots, ZFS, and one-click Ollama plus OpenClaw on a 7W chip is a much better fit for that use case. FailSafe Mode starting with 2 drives and scaling to 4 later is a nice touch for people who don't want to buy all their storage upfront.

A plug-and-play ZFS box at home will hit scale pain on silent data loss risks from misconfigured pools plus long-term security patching across 300+ one-click apps.

Best practice is automated ZFS snapshots + scrub schedules with SMART alerts, plus signed app manifests and unattended OS/app updates with rollback for bad releases.

How are you handling app isolation and update provenance today, and will you surface a “health score” UI (pool status, scrub cadence, failed backups) for non-technical users?

How would an Intel® Core™ i3-N300 compare with Apple silicon M5?

The aluminum + walnut design is what sold me — finally a home server that doesn't look like IT equipment from 2010. ZFS with FailSafe Mode is smart for people who want peace of mind but don't want to buy 4 SSDs upfront. What's the typical power draw when running a few apps like OpenClaw + Immich? Always curious about the 24/7 running cost.

The timing on this is perfect - traditional NAS systems feel so dated compared to what you've built here. Love that you listened to the community feedback from Umbrel Home and delivered on all three asks: more power (i3-N300), more storage (16TB), and RAID support (ZFS). Question for you: what's been the most popular use case among early users? Are people mainly using it for media/Plex, or are you seeing more interest in running AI models locally with OpenClaw?