Upgrading a laptop is straightforward, but it’s easy to make costly mistakes. Buy the wrong RAM and it won’t even fit in the slot. Forget to ground yourself and static electricity silently kills components. Take shortcuts and your data vanishes. This guide covers the 8 most common upgrade mistakes and how to avoid each one. Follow this and you’ll save money, frustration, and the risk of breaking your laptop.
Mistake 1: Buying DDR4 RAM for a DDR5 Laptop (or Vice Versa)
What happens: DDR4 and DDR5 RAM look similar but are completely different. They use different slots, different voltages, and have different notches. Inserting the wrong type won’t even fit — the module physically won’t slide into the slot. You’ll realize the mistake immediately but won’t get a refund if you’ve opened the box.
How to avoid it:
- Check your current RAM type first. Use our specs checking guide or Task Manager (Windows) → Performance → Memory to see if you have DDR4 or DDR5.
- Check your laptop’s manual. Manufacturer specifications will list “DDR4” or “DDR5” explicitly.
- Search your laptop model + “RAM upgrade.” You’ll find articles confirming the type.
- Verify before buying. Product listings on Amazon will clearly state “DDR4” or “DDR5” — read the title and product description.
- Buy from Amazon or Curry’s (easy returns). If you accidentally buy the wrong type, these retailers have no-questions-asked returns.
Cost of mistake: £0 (if caught before opening) to £80 (cost of wrong RAM if you can’t return it).
Mistake 2: Getting the Wrong SSD Form Factor
What happens: SSDs come in different form factors (physical sizes): 2280, 2242, 2230, or 2.5″ SATA. Your laptop’s slot only accepts one specific size. Buy a 2280 SSD for a laptop that needs 2242, and it physically won’t fit — the drive is too long and will hit the side of the case or neighboring components.
Real example: New Microsoft Surface models use 2242 form factor. Searching “SSD upgrade” and buying a standard 2280 (most common size) results in a drive that doesn’t fit.
How to avoid it:
- Check your current SSD’s physical size. Open your laptop (see our SSD upgrade guide) and measure or look at the drive directly. Note how long it is.
- Check your laptop’s manual. Spec sheets list “M.2 2280” or “M.2 2242” or whatever your slot accepts.
- Use a compatibility checker. Crucial or Kingston have online tools — enter your laptop model and they’ll tell you the exact form factor.
- Measure the M.2 slot physically. If uncertain, measure the distance from the drive connector to the mount screw on your current drive. That’s the length you need.
- Verify the product listing. Amazon will list “2280 form factor” or similar. Read it carefully.
Cost of mistake: £50–120 (cost of incompatible SSD) if you can’t return it, or time spent organizing a return.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Soldered RAM — Trying to Upgrade What Isn’t Upgradeable
What happens: You buy a new laptop with “32 GB RAM” and think you can upgrade it later. You don’t realize the RAM is soldered (permanently attached to the motherboard). When you decide to upgrade in a few years, you discover it can’t be upgraded — you’re locked into that 32 GB forever.
Real example: MacBook Air M3 comes with 8 GB or 16 GB soldered RAM. You can’t upgrade it. Ever. If you need 32 GB, you had to buy it configured at purchase time for £1,500+ instead of £1,100 base price.
How to avoid it:
- Check upgradeability BEFORE buying. Before purchasing, verify whether RAM is upgradeable using our brand compatibility pages. Search “[laptop model] RAM upgrade” — if the answer is “soldered,” don’t buy if you want upgrade flexibility.
- Look for “SO-DIMM” in specs. If the manual says “SO-DIMM,” it’s upgradeable. If it says “soldered” or “unified memory,” it’s not.
- Choose wisely when configuring at purchase. If buying a laptop with soldered RAM, configure it with the maximum RAM you might ever need. It’s much cheaper to buy the high-RAM config upfront (£100 extra) than regret it later.
- Prioritize repairable brands. Framework and ThinkPad have upgradeable RAM. MacBook, Microsoft Surface, and premium ultrabooks often don’t.
Cost of mistake: Potentially £500–1,000 (you buy a new laptop because you can’t upgrade the old one).
Mistake 4: Not Matching RAM Speed to Your Laptop’s Supported Speed
What happens: Your laptop supports DDR4-3200 (3200 MHz). You buy DDR4-3600 RAM thinking “faster is better.” It installs fine, but your laptop runs it at 3200 MHz anyway (defaults to slowest speed), so you’ve wasted money on faster RAM you can’t use.
Less common version: Some older laptops are picky about RAM speed. DDR4-4000 in a DDR4-3200 slot might not boot or cause stability issues (rare, but possible).
How to avoid it:
- Check your laptop’s max supported RAM speed. Manufacturer’s specification sheet will list “DDR4-3200” or “DDR5-5600” or similar.
- Buy matching speed or slower. If max is 3200 MHz, buy 3200 MHz or 3000 MHz RAM. Don’t overspend on 3600 MHz.
- Faster is fine but won’t help. If you buy faster RAM (3600 MHz for a 3200 MHz slot), it’s not harmful — it just runs at the slower speed. You paid extra for nothing.
- Understand the practical difference. In real-world use, the difference between 3200 MHz and 3600 MHz RAM is 1–2% performance. Not worth overspending.
Cost of mistake: £10–30 (overpaying for faster RAM you don’t need).
Mistake 5: Replacing SSD Without Backing Up or Cloning Your Data
What happens: You buy a new SSD, remove the old one, install the new one, and boot your laptop. Windows won’t start — there’s no operating system on the new drive because you didn’t clone the old one. All your files (documents, photos, everything) are on the old drive, which is now disconnected. You’ve lost access to your data.
Even worse: You wipe the old drive to clear space and then realize the new SSD didn’t clone properly. Your data is gone.
How to avoid it:
- ALWAYS clone or back up before swapping SSDs. See our SSD upgrade guide for step-by-step cloning instructions.
- Use an external M.2 enclosure to clone. Buy a USB M.2 enclosure (£10–20), install your new SSD in it, plug it into your laptop, and use Macrium Reflect Free to clone the old drive to new one.
- Keep the old SSD after cloning. Don’t reuse it immediately. Keep it for 1–2 weeks to ensure the new SSD is working properly. Then either wipe it for reuse or keep as backup.
- Alternative: Clean Windows install. If you’re comfortable, you can do a fresh Windows install instead of cloning. But this means reinstalling all your software. Cloning is easier for most people.
Cost of mistake: Potentially £0–unlimited (depends on data recovery difficulty; professional data recovery costs £300–1,000+).

