M.2 NVMe drives are about the size of a stick of gum and slide directly into a slot on your motherboard. No cables, no power connectors, no drive bay. Installing one is among the easiest tasks in a PC build — but there are a few small things that trip up first-timers. Here’s a walkthrough.

Before you start

You’ll need:

  • Your NVMe drive.
  • A small Phillips screwdriver.
  • The motherboard manual, opened to the M.2 section.
  • Optional: tweezers, in case you drop the tiny mounting screw.

Pick the right slot

Most modern motherboards have 2 to 4 M.2 slots, but they’re not all equal. Each slot has:

  • A PCIe generation it supports (Gen 3, Gen 4, or Gen 5).
  • Possibly a lane sharing relationship with other slots or SATA ports.
  • A length range it supports (M.2 2280 is the most common; some support 2230, 2242, or 22110).

For best performance, put your fastest drive in the slot that supports its generation directly from the CPU (usually labeled “CPU M.2” or “M.2_1” in the manual). Slower drives can go in chipset-connected slots.

Pay attention to sharing notes in the manual. For example, “Using M.2_3 disables SATA ports 5 and 6” is the kind of detail you’d rather know in advance.

Remove the heatsink

Most modern motherboards include heatsinks over the M.2 slots. To install the drive:

  1. Remove the small screws holding the heatsink in place (usually one or two).
  2. Lift the heatsink off and set it aside.
  3. Peel off the thin protective film from the thermal pad underneath (if there is one). Sometimes there’s also a film on the bottom thermal pad — peel that too.

Locate the mounting standoff

At the end of the M.2 slot opposite the connector, there’s a small threaded post — the standoff — and a screw. The standoff position determines the supported drive length. If your drive is 2280 (the most common size), the standoff should already be in the 80mm position. If it’s in the wrong place, unscrew it and move it.

Some newer boards use a toolless latch instead of a screw. Just open the latch.

Insert the drive

  1. Hold the drive by its sides, contact end pointing at the slot.
  2. Insert it at about a 30-degree angle. The gold contacts should slide all the way in.
  3. Once seated, the back end of the drive will be sticking up at an angle.
  4. Push the back end gently down so it sits flat over the standoff.

The drive should not be tight or forced. If you can’t get it in, double-check the orientation and confirm there isn’t a small plastic spacer in the way.

Secure the drive

Hold the drive flat against the standoff and place the small screw in the hole at the end of the drive. Tighten it just enough that the drive doesn’t lift up. Don’t overtighten — the screw and the standoff are very small and easy to strip.