Google officially announces the new Google Drive pricing list, with drastic 50% cuts. Competition appears decidedly shattered under these conditions.
Google has decided to deliver a decisive blow to the virtual data storage market by launching a new Google Drive pricing structure.
The cloud storage service from the Mountain View giant has indeed been revised in terms of its offering to users, with a 50% reduction compared to previously applied prices.
There’s no competition left, at least at the current stage: such a decrease completely decimates the existing competition from Dropbox or Microsoft OneDrive, the two strongest competitors.
The available memory “tiers” for each user mainly vary in four price brackets – and consequently, storage space – but for those with specific needs far beyond the “normal” requirements of an average user, Google allows for a personalized offer to be calibrated: if you need more than 10 Terabytes, you can contact the Google Drive staff to receive a sort of custom quote.
Those who have previously purchased a storage service package can update it via the “storage purchase page” to revise their Drive profile.
Here, then, are all the Google Drive prices, as currently updated:
- Up to 15 GB: free;
- 100 GB: $1.99;
- 1 Terabyte: $9.99;
- From 10 Terabytes: starting from $99.99.

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