Recordable Discs (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray) Buy Online at an Affordable Price
Look, it's 2026 and everyone is sure everything's moving to the cloud. But then suddenly you need to transfer an X-ray or some huge legal archive - and bam, everyone's looking to buy recordable discs. We have everything here (CD-R, DVD-R, Blu-Ray). We are an official importer of the big brands. Available in stock with fast shipping to all over the country. Don't want to pay for delivery? There's free self-pickup.
Why do you even need this today? (And what's the deal with shipping)
Many people ask me where to buy recordable discs in Israel today... as if we've passed the 90s. But the truth? Blank discs are still a must-have. Try leaving a hospital after a medical scan (CT or MRI) with a USB drive. It doesn't exist – they still work with CDs. Or accountants and institutions that need physical data backups that won't disappear just because some server somewhere crashed. And yes, there are still people burning music for old car CD players. I admit, my dad is like that too.
So how much do recordable discs cost? It's peanuts today. Really. But buying recordable discs online can sometimes be a bit of a gamble. Delivery, you know – they throw the package, and that delicate plastic just breaks. Because of this, as part of being an online recordable disc store in Israel, we've grasped the principle: we pack every package of discs or spindle (there are packs of 25, 50, or 100 units per pack) with insane amounts of bubble wrap. They arrive intact. Period.
Maybe you compared prices for recordable discs and saw differences. If you're looking for recommended recordable discs – definitely go for Verbatim. They actually last for years, don't peel. Silver Line is also totally fine for those looking for cheap recordable discs for one-time tasks. Honestly, these are the best recordable discs to buy here because we have special online prices for recordable discs and convenient payment plans.
What type of media for burning should you choose?
Not everything is the same. CD-R is the old standard - perfect for audio (about 700MB). If it's for office archives or heavier data, DVD-R will cover you with its 4.7GB. And there's also Blu-Ray or BD-R with a dual layer (25GB and more). At some point, every basic disc burner knew how to read everything, but it's good to match the capacity to what you actually need.
| Disc Type | Data Storage Capacity | Recommended Use |
|---|---|---|
| CD-R / CD-RW | 700MB | Burning music for the car, light text documents, basic Word files. |
| DVD-R / DVD+R | 4.7GB / 8.5GB | Medical imaging, office data backup, archiving old events, archives. |
| Blu-Ray (BD-R) | 25GB / 50GB | 4K quality video, huge data repositories, heavy graphic projects. |
