The UGREEN DH4300 Plus is a 4-bay NAS that delivers solid home and SOHO performance at $595. But its ARM-based processor sets a firm ceiling on what it can do. If your workload is file sharing, backup to the cloud, and syncing data across devices, the DH4300 Plus handles it cleanly and quietly. If you want Docker containers, virtual machines, or Plex transcoding, you need to step up to UGREEN's DXP series with Intel hardware instead.
In short: The DH4300 Plus (from $595 at UGREEN AU and Scorptec, $629 at PLE Computers) is UGREEN's 4-bay ARM NAS running UGOS. It suits home users who need network storage, cloud backup, and basic media serving via DLNA. It does not support Docker, virtual machines, or Plex hardware transcoding. For those features, the DXP2800 or DXP4800 (Intel N100, UGOS Pro) are the correct choice. Though the DXP2800 has only 2 bays for a similar price.
What Is the UGREEN DH4300 Plus?
UGREEN entered the NAS market in 2023 with the NASync range, splitting their lineup into two tiers: the DH series (ARM-based, UGOS, budget-focused) and the DXP series (Intel N100 or Core i5, UGOS Pro, more capable). The DH4300 Plus sits at the top of the DH range. Four bays, 8GB RAM, and 2.5GbE networking for $595 from UGREEN AU or Scorptec. It was designed to give home users a capable file server without paying Intel-class pricing.
The design is compact and clean. A small desktop box that fits easily on a shelf or under a desk. Drive installation is tool-free via a slide-in tray system. The front panel includes drive activity LEDs and a USB copy button for quick one-press backup from a USB drive. Noise is low; with typical consumer NAS drives installed, the DH4300 Plus is quiet enough for a home office.
UGREEN DH4300 Plus. Best for Home File Sharing and Basic Backup
The DH4300 Plus suits home users who want a reliable 4-bay storage solution for SMB/Samba file sharing, Time Machine backups, cloud sync, and standard NAS tasks. And who do not need Docker, VMs, or active media transcoding. At $595, it undercuts most 4-bay Synology and QNAP options significantly. The 2.5GbE port is a genuine advantage over cheaper alternatives that ship with 1GbE only.
| CPU | ARM Cortex-A55, 8-core, 2.4GHz |
|---|---|
| RAM | 8GB DDR4 (not upgradeable) |
| Drive Bays | 4 × 3.5"/2.5" SATA |
| Network | 1 × 2.5GbE |
| USB | 2 × USB 3.2 Gen 1 (Type-A) |
| M.2 NVMe | None |
| HDMI | None |
| OS | UGOS (ARM) |
| Docker / VMs | Not supported |
| AU Price (UGREEN AU / Scorptec) | $595 |
| AU Price (PLE Computers) | $629 |
Pros
- 4 bays at $595 undercuts comparable Synology and QNAP 4-bay pricing significantly
- 2.5GbE port enables faster LAN transfers than 1GbE competitors at this price point
- 8GB RAM. More than adequate for UGOS workloads
- UGOS supports cloud sync (Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, Backblaze B2), Time Machine, and Samba sharing
- Quiet operation and low idle power draw. Suited to always-on home use
Cons
- ARM CPU means no Docker, no VMs, and no Plex Media Server support
- UGOS app ecosystem is limited compared to Synology DSM or QNAP QTS
- RAM is not upgradeable. 8GB is the ceiling for this unit
- No M.2 NVMe slots for SSD caching or tiered storage
UGREEN DH2300. Step Down for Smaller Setups
The DH2300 is UGREEN's 2-bay ARM NAS, available from $339 at Computer Alliance and $359 at PLE Computers and Scorptec. It runs the same UGOS platform as the DH4300 Plus but with a slower 1.8GHz processor, 4GB RAM (half of the DH4300 Plus), and 1GbE networking instead of 2.5GbE. For users with small storage needs who don't plan to expand, the DH2300 is a reasonable starting point. For anyone considering more than 2 drives in the next 2-3 years, the DH4300 Plus is the better long-term purchase. The price difference is $256 at most, and you get 2 extra bays plus faster networking in return.
| CPU | ARM Cortex-A55, 8-core, 1.8GHz |
|---|---|
| RAM | 4GB DDR4 (not upgradeable) |
| Drive Bays | 2 × 3.5"/2.5" SATA |
| Network | 1 × 1GbE |
| USB | 2 × USB 3.2 Gen 1 (Type-A) |
| M.2 NVMe | None |
| HDMI | None |
| OS | UGOS (ARM) |
| Docker / VMs | Not supported |
| AU Price (Scorptec) | $340 |
| AU Price (PLE Computers) | $359 |
Pros
- Lowest entry price for a UGREEN NAS. From $339
- Same UGOS feature set as DH4300 Plus (cloud sync, Time Machine, Samba)
- Compact 2-bay form factor suits tight spaces or portable use
Cons
- 1GbE networking limits LAN transfer speeds to approximately 120 MB/s maximum
- Only 2 bays. No way to expand storage without replacing the unit entirely
- 4GB RAM is limiting for multiple simultaneous tasks
- Slower 1.8GHz CPU compared to the DH4300 Plus 2.4GHz
UGREEN DXP2800. Step Up for Docker and Intel Performance
The DXP2800 is UGREEN's entry into the Intel-based DXP lineup. Intel Celeron N100, 8GB DDR5 (upgradeable to 16GB), dual 2.5GbE, two M.2 NVMe slots, HDMI output, and UGOS Pro with Docker support. At approximately $630 from UGREEN AU or Amazon AU, it is only $35 more than the DH4300 Plus. But the capability gap is enormous. The DXP2800 runs Docker containers (Plex, Jellyfin, Home Assistant), hardware-accelerates video transcoding via Intel Quick Sync, and can serve as a lightweight VM host. The clear limitation is that it has only 2 bays. Half the storage capacity of the DH4300 Plus. If you need both Intel performance and 4 bays, the DXP4800 (approximately $799) is the next step up.
| CPU | Intel Celeron N100, 4-core, up to 3.4GHz |
|---|---|
| RAM | 8GB DDR5 (upgradeable to 16GB) |
| Drive Bays | 2 × 3.5"/2.5" SATA |
| Network | 2 × 2.5GbE |
| USB | 2 × USB 3.2 Gen 2 (Type-A), 1 × USB-C |
| M.2 NVMe | 2 × PCIe 3.0 |
| HDMI | 1 × HDMI 2.0 |
| OS | UGOS Pro (Intel) |
| Docker / VMs | Docker supported |
| AU Price (UGREEN AU / Amazon AU) | ~$630 (approx.) |
Pros
- Intel N100 enables Docker, Plex hardware transcoding via Quick Sync, and full UGOS Pro features
- Dual 2.5GbE with link aggregation support for higher combined throughput
- Two M.2 NVMe slots for SSD caching or all-flash primary storage
- RAM upgradeable to 16GB. Headroom for container workloads
- HDMI output for direct display connection
Cons
- Only 2 bays. Significant storage capacity limitation compared to the DH4300 Plus (4 bays)
- No official AU distributor. Must purchase via UGREEN AU direct or Amazon AU
- Approximately $35 more than the DH4300 Plus, but with half the drive bays
UGOS vs UGOS Pro: What You Actually Give Up
The DH4300 Plus runs UGOS. UGREEN's ARM-targeted operating system. The DXP series runs UGOS Pro, built for Intel hardware. The feature gap is more significant than the naming suggests.
What UGOS supports: SMB/Samba file sharing, AFP/Time Machine, FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, cloud sync (Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, Backblaze B2, S3-compatible services), USB backup, DLNA media server, basic photo management, RAID (0/1/5/6 depending on bay count), and scheduled backup tasks. This covers the vast majority of home and SOHO NAS use cases.
What UGOS does not support: Docker, virtual machines, hardware video transcoding, Plex Media Server (no compatible ARM build), and the broader application ecosystem that relies on containers. If any of these features are important to you, the DH4300 Plus will disappoint regardless of how well it handles file serving.
UGOS Pro on the DXP series adds full Docker support via Container Manager, Intel-accelerated features including Quick Sync video transcoding, and a meaningfully larger application ecosystem. It is a different product tier, not just a software update.
Performance: What to Expect Over Your Network
Over a 2.5GbE connection, the DH4300 Plus delivers sequential read speeds in the 250-280 MB/s range with typical NAS-grade HDDs. Close to saturating the 2.5GbE link (theoretical maximum approximately 312 MB/s). This is meaningfully faster than 1GbE devices, which cap around 120 MB/s. For home users copying large files, running Time Machine backups, or transferring video libraries over a local network, the 2.5GbE port makes a real difference that the DH2300's 1GbE cannot match.
CPU-intensive workloads are where the ARM processor shows its limits. Encryption-at-rest operations, on-the-fly indexing, and complex search across large file libraries will be slower than on an Intel N100. For a home NAS used for standard storage and backup, this rarely matters. For anything that sustains heavy processor load. Such as running a Nextcloud instance with many simultaneous users. The ceiling will become apparent.
Who Should Buy the DH4300 Plus?
Buy the DH4300 Plus if: You need a 4-bay NAS for home file sharing, cloud backup, and Time Machine. And you want to spend as little as possible to get it. At $595, it is significantly cheaper than a comparable 4-bay Synology DS425+ (~$819) or QNAP TS-462. If your NAS workload is primarily storage and network sharing, the DH4300 Plus is adequate hardware at an honest price.
Don't buy the DH4300 Plus if: You want to run Docker containers, Plex with transcoding, virtual machines, or an advanced app ecosystem. The ARM processor and UGOS platform simply do not support these workloads. The DXP2800 (Intel N100, from ~$630, 2 bays) or DXP4800 (Intel N100, from ~$799, 4 bays) are the correct alternatives. They cost more, but the capability difference is significant. See the full UGREEN NAS comparison to weigh all current models side by side.
Australian Consumer Law protections apply when purchasing from Australian retailers. Retailers like PLE Computers and Scorptec handle warranty claims as the first point of contact. For UGREEN AU direct purchases, warranty is handled through UGREEN AU. Ask about the warranty replacement process before buying. UGREEN's Australian after-sales infrastructure is less established than Synology's or QNAP's distributor networks, so understanding your retailer's specific process matters.
Warranty note: UGREEN NAS warranty in Australia is handled through the retailer under Australian Consumer Law. For Scorptec and PLE purchases, warranty goes through that retailer. For UGREEN AU direct purchases, warranty goes through UGREEN AU. UGREEN does not have a local service centre network comparable to Synology's or QNAP's. Ask your retailer about their replacement process before you need it. The standard process for NAS warranty in Australia runs retailer → distributor → vendor, with a typical resolution window of 2-3 weeks.
Related reading: our NAS buyer's guide, our AU retailer guide, and our UGREEN brand guide.
Use our free NAS Sizing Wizard to get a personalised NAS recommendation.
Does the UGREEN DH4300 Plus support Docker?
No. The DH4300 Plus runs UGOS, the ARM-based version of UGREEN's operating system, which does not include Docker or container support. Docker is only available on UGOS Pro, which runs on the DXP series (Intel-based models such as the DXP2800, DXP4800, and DXP4800 Plus). If Docker is a requirement, a DXP model is the correct choice.
Can the DH4300 Plus run Plex?
Plex Media Server does not have an ARM build compatible with UGOS, and the DH4300 Plus does not support Docker where Plex could otherwise be containerised. The DH4300 Plus supports DLNA media serving, which works with many smart TVs, game consoles, and media players without Plex. If you want full Plex with hardware transcoding, the DXP2800 or DXP4800 (Intel N100, UGOS Pro) are the appropriate UGREEN options. See the UGREEN Plex guide for a full comparison.
What is the difference between the DH4300 Plus and the DXP4800?
Both have 4 bays, but that is where the similarity ends. The DH4300 Plus (from $595) has an ARM CPU and runs UGOS. Good for file sharing and backup, no Docker or transcoding. The DXP4800 (approximately $799) has an Intel Celeron N100, runs UGOS Pro, supports Docker, hardware video transcoding via Intel Quick Sync, dual 2.5GbE, and M.2 NVMe slots. The right choice depends on whether Docker or transcoding features are needed for your workload.
Where can I buy the UGREEN DH4300 Plus in Australia?
The DH4300 Plus is available from UGREEN AU direct at $595 and Scorptec at $595. PLE Computers stocks it at $629. Mwave and Computer Alliance also carry UGREEN products periodically. Check current stock across all retailers before purchasing. Supply can vary, particularly outside major capitals.
What RAID levels does the DH4300 Plus support?
The DH4300 Plus supports RAID 0 (striping), RAID 1 (mirroring), RAID 5 (single parity, 3+ drives), RAID 6 (dual parity, 4 drives), and JBOD. With 4 bays, RAID 5 gives you 3/4 of total drive capacity with one-drive fault tolerance. RAID 6 gives you 2/4 of total capacity but survives two simultaneous drive failures. Use the RAID Calculator to model usable capacity and fault tolerance for your specific drive sizes.
Is the DH4300 Plus a good choice for a first NAS?
It depends on your expectations. The DH4300 Plus is a good first NAS if you want network file sharing, Time Machine backups for Macs, and cloud sync. And you are content with the UGOS app ecosystem. It is not a good first NAS if you have plans to run Docker apps, Plex, or home automation software. UGREEN's support infrastructure in Australia is less mature than Synology's, so first-time NAS buyers who anticipate needing hand-holding through setup or a warranty claim may prefer the Synology DS425+ instead.
Compare all current UGREEN NAS models side by side. DH and DXP series pricing, specs, and which suits each use case.
UGREEN NAS Comparison Guide →