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The hidden cost of free cloud storage

Free storage is not free. You pay with the thing being stored. A look at what the bill actually is, and why it keeps going up.

Francis Yu · Co-founder · May 14, 2026

The first few gigabytes are always free. That is not generosity. It is the start of a relationship, and the relationship is the product.

You pay with the contents

The clearest cost is the one we already talked about in our piece on what these companies do with your photos. Free storage gets funded by the value of what you put in it: the ability to profile you, to improve products off your data, to keep you inside one company's world. The storage is the bait, not the business.

You pay with lock-in

Once a few years of photos and documents live in one account, leaving gets harder every month. Exporting is awkward by design. The longer you stay, the more it costs to go, and everyone running these services knows it. That is not an accident in the product. It is the point of it.

You pay in slow upgrades

Free never stays enough. Phones shoot bigger photos and longer videos every year, the free tier fills up, and then come the gentle reminders that your memories are "at risk" unless you upgrade. So the free plan quietly becomes a paid one, and now you are renting space on someone else's computer forever, with the rent set by them.

Owning changes the maths

When you own the hardware your data lives on, the equation flips. You pay once for the device and the storage is yours. There is no tier that fills up and no monthly reminder, because there is no landlord. That is how we set up The Ark: you buy it, you own it, and your photos and files live on it at home. No subscription, no creeping upgrade prompts.

None of this means cloud storage is evil. It is convenient, and convenience is worth something. But "free" was always a price, not a gift, and it is fair to ask whether you would rather pay it in your data and your options, or pay once and be done.

About the author

Francis Yu · Co-founder

Co-founder of ArkCentral. Writes about privacy, hardware, and getting your digital life off other people’s computers.