Skip to main content

Google Photos will start charging you for uploads today

Google Photos has been one of Google’s most popular services ever since it was launched in 2015, offering unlimited free photo storage at so-called “high-quality.” As was announced in November, however, that’s coming to an end. Today, June 1, Google Photos will begin charging you for any storage over 15GB.

In other words, no matter what quality of photo or video you upload to Google Photos, it will count against your Google One storage plan, and if you exceed 15GB, you’ll need to pay up to keep uploading. To be clear, photos and videos uploaded before June 1 will not count against that 15GB limit — only those uploaded after. So, you won’t find yourself suddenly having to shell out for Google Photos, and you will have time to decide whether or not you want to pay for Google One at all if you don’t already.

If you use Google Photos a lot, however, it’s probably worth paying for at least some Google One storage. Google Photos is an excellent service, and it makes sense that it wouldn’t be totally free.

Google Photos
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Many users may not ever need to pay anyway, or at least not for the foreseeable future. According to Google, 80% of Photos users won’t hit 15GB for at least three years. That’s not to mention the fact that 15GB is three times the amount you’ll get on Apple’s iCloud, which only offers 5GB of free cloud storage.

Google Photos ties into the rest of the Google One cloud storage ecosystem, which encompasses Google Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos. Google One also offers a free VPN service for Android if you subscribe for 2TB or more of Google One storage.

Google One storage is about on par with the rest of the industry in terms of pricing. You’ll spend $2 per month for 100GB of storage, $3 per month for 200GB, $10 per month for 2TB, or up to $150 per month for 30TB.

Consider yourself warned — Google Photos may start to cost you a little more. But again, if you use it a lot, you should spend the cash — it’s an awesome service and worth the money.

Editors' Recommendations

Christian de Looper
Christian’s interest in technology began as a child in Australia, when he stumbled upon a computer at a garage sale that he…
The Google app on your Android phone is getting a helpful new feature
Google app on Android beta showing Notifications.

The Google app for Android phones is getting a helpful new feature to make search even better. The latest beta has a dedicated "Notifications" feed in its bottom bar. The feature was first introduced on the mobile version of Google for Android earlier this year. The app feature was first noticed by 9to5Google.

The app now includes a Notifications option at the bottom, next to Discover, Search, and Saved items. The Notifications section displays a continuous list of alerts from Google Search, weather conditions, flight information, sports scores, movies and TV shows, and more. The notifications are grouped under “Today” and “Earlier." This feature should prove handy if you miss a notification from the Google app, as it provides a more focused view than Android's system-level history.

Read more
5 phones you should buy instead of the OnePlus 12
A person holding the OnePlus 12.

The OnePlus 12 is OnePlus' latest smartphone, and it's a true return to form for the "flagship killer." It's big and beautiful, with a distinctive design that leans away from the default "big glass slab" you might be tiring of. It's powerful, too, thanks to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, two-day battery life, and some of the fastest charging speeds you'll find on a phone on the U.S. market. It's easily one of the best phones you can buy, with a starting price of $800.

But is it the best? It might not be, depending on what you're actually looking for. There are a number of smartphones with similar levels of power, beauty, and features — and varying reasons why you'd pick them over OnePlus' current flagship.

Read more
This is the one AI feature from Google I/O 2024 I can’t wait to use
Google Photos app on a Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Google’s main I/O 2024 keynote was jam-packed with a ton of new AI features that are coming to desktop and mobile, thanks to Gemini. There will be new ways to search Google through video and multimodal prompt requests, while smartphones eventually get AI superpowers through the camera with Project Astra.

But there’s one feature that really stuck out to me: Ask Photos with Gemini in Google Photos.
First, what is Gemini?

Read more