JL
JLink Technology 傑聯特科技
RFQ

SPI NOR / NAND Flash Selection & Replacement Guide

3V standard, 1.8V low-voltage, or SPI NAND — pick by density and voltage

Serial Flash selection comes down to three things: density, supply voltage (3V vs 1.8V), and NOR (code/small) vs NAND (large data). GigaDevice GD25/GD5F use standard JEDEC pinouts and commands, a common second source for Winbond W25Q, Macronix MX25L, ISSI, Puya, and more. Organized by category below.

① 3V standard SPI NOR (the W25Q second source)

Standard JEDEC pinout and command set — the go-to for code storage and boot flash.

8Mbit, replaces W25Q80.

64Mbit, mainstream density.

128Mbit, replaces W25Q128.

② 1.8V low-voltage SPI NOR (wearable/IoT)

For 1.8V-rail low-power designs — do not mix with 3V parts.

128Mbit 1.8V, matches W25Q128JW.

32Mbit 1.8V low-voltage.

③ SPI NAND (large data storage)

When density outgrows NOR, use SPI NAND with on-die ECC.

1Gbit SPI NAND.

2Gbit SPI NAND.

Cross-references

Related guides

Frequently asked questions

Can GD25Q directly replace W25Q?

Yes — both are JEDEC-standard SPI NOR with the same pinout/commands and QE-bit; same density swaps directly. The only caveat: update firmware that hard-codes the JEDEC ID (Winbond EFh, GigaDevice C8h).

Which part for a 1.8V design?

Choose the GD25LE series (1.8V), e.g. the GD25LE128E matches the 1.8V W25Q128JW; never substitute a 3V part for 1.8V or apply 3.3V.

NOR or NAND — how to choose?

For small density and execute-in-place (XIP) code use NOR (GD25Q/GD25LE); for large data logging beyond the NOR sweet spot use SPI NAND (GD5F), which requires ECC/bad-block handling.

Not sure which part fits?

Tell us your application and constraints — our engineers will recommend a part and quote stock, pricing, and lead time.

Request a Quote