Where Can I Store All My Photos and Videos
The best photo storage and sharing sites in 2021
The best photo storage and sharing sites are an essential part of any photographer's digital kitbag — whether you're a professional or just take pictures of your cat on your phone.
There are many reasons why you'd want to use one. Storage, for starters — the best photography sites give your digital images a safe home in the cloud, safeguarding them against the risk of fire or theft or even just a hard-drive failure.
But there are many other reasons to upload your pictures to one of the best photo storage sites. For instance, they can also make it easy to access your images wherever you are, so long as you have an internet connection. And they can also act as a way to organize and edit your images and make it easy to share them with family and friends.
- The best cloud storage for photos and pictures: free and paid
- Cloud storage vs external hard disk drive: Which one is better?
- Take your photography up a notch with the best cameras
Many have free tiers of service, while others are geared towards professionals who want to market and sell their photos online. Whatever your needs, there's sure to be a photo storage site for you; in fact, you may want to use more than one.
The 3 best cloud storage services for photos right now
If you're not so interested in the sharing, editing and organizing aspects of photo storage, and simply want a safe home for your digital images, you might be better looking at general cloud storage. You can view a full list on our best cloud storage for photos page, but we've included the top three here in case you want to jump straight to them.
What are the best photo storage and sharing sites?
After testing all of the major services, we think the best photo storage and sharing site is Flickr. While the free version of Flickr has a cap of 1,000 photos, a Pro account costs $60 per year, which gets you an unlimited number of uploads, as well as the ability to store videos up to 10 minutes in length. Flickr has excellent tools for touching up photos and lots of tagging features, so it's easy to find your images. And, Flickr excels at letting you share your photos with others.
Android and iPhone owners who simply want an easy way to back up their photos and video should check out Google Photos and iCloud, respectively. These two photo storage services are less expensive, and can store all your images in the cloud automatically. Plus, if you have a Google Nest Hub Max or some other smart display, you can sync it with your Google Photos account.
However, Google Photos is no longer quite the deal it was. As of June 1, 2021, you no longer get free unlimited storage. Instead, any photo you upload will be counted against your 15GB Google Drive storage limit, which includes not just Google Photos, but Gmail and any other document you have saved in Google's cloud service.
If your combined files exceed 15GB, Google may delete those that go over the limit, though the company says it will provide multiple warnings before doing so. Everything you had saved in High or Express quality before June 1 is safe forever, but anything that's been uploaded after that date from a non-Pixel phone starts taking up space. Here's our guide to what to do when Google Photos free storage ends.
Amazon Prime members might want to check out Amazon Photos, which offers unlimited storage with your Prime membership, and has pretty good tagging and sharing features. And, you can also display your photos on an Amazon Echo Show. If you plan to print anything out, though, we recommend using something other than Amazon Prints. And if you're choosing between the two services, you should find our Amazon photo storage vs Google Photos article helpful.
Read on for all of our top picks for the best photo storage and sharing sites.
The best photo storage and sharing sites today
1. Flickr
The best photo storage service overall
Specifications
Free subscription: Up to 1,000 photos
Starting subscription price: $60/year
Reasons to buy
+Great selection of tools +Extensive tagging features +Clean interface
Reasons to avoid
-Free accounts limited to 1,000 photos
Flickr is our pick of the best photo storage and sharing sites, thanks to its massive amount of storage and a simple, clean interface that makes it a joy to use. It remains the best option for serious shooters. Flickr also offers a great selection of tools, extensive tagging features and support for both viewing and downloading photos at a variety of resolutions (including, unusually, the option to offer the original size). There's even a stats engine that lets you track who is looking at your photos, while a very easy drag-and-drop system allows you to organize albums of your photos and collections of photos from you and other photographers.
Since being sold to SmugMug, the company announced a cap of 1,000 photos on free accounts. If you upgrade to a Pro account ($60 per year), you get unlimited storage, the ability to view your images at resolutions up to 6K, no ads and the option to stream videos up to 10 minutes in length. Pro subscribers also get $35 off a $70 order at photo-book service Blurb. (In our opinion, Blurb isn't that great, so check out our picks for the best photo books). You also get two months of Adobe Creative Cloud for free (a $20 value).
Read our full Flickr review .
2. 500px
Photo storage for pro photographers
Specifications
Free subscription: Up to 2,000 photos
Starting subscription price: $59.88/year
Reasons to buy
+Can sell your photos as royalty-free artwork through the site +Affordable subscriptions
Reasons to avoid
-Doesn't offer photo-printing services
Aimed at serious photographers, 500px offers an image-focused design that puts your photos front and center, providing a clean and elegant way to display your best shots. You can organize your pictures into Sets (photos on a particular theme) and Stories (photos of an event) that present the images in a strikingly dramatic fashion.
The free version of the service allows you to upload up to seven photos per week, but you can upgrade to one of two paid levels for a reasonable fee: Awesome usually costs $4.99 a month, and Pro $9.99 a month, though the site is currently offering a discount on the first year. Both offer unlimited uploads, plus more customization options and listings in the sites' pro directory. Whichever option you choose, 500px remains one of the best photo storage sites.
3. Google Photos
The best photo storage option for backing up photos from your smartphone
Specifications
Free subscription: Unlimited storage for photos up to 16 megapixels and videos up to 1080p
Starting subscription price: $2/month (100MB)
Reasons to buy
+Unlimited storage for Pixel owners +Lots of tagging and sharing features +Basic editing tools
Reasons to avoid
-Photos limited to 16MP in size unless you pay for a Google Drive subscription. -Photos from non-Pixel devices will count towards your existing cloud storage limit.
Google's photo-sharing service was designed primarily as a way to back up photos and video taken on smartphones, but it has evolved into one of the smartest pieces of software in the entire Google ecosystem.
Google Photos uses AI to categorize your photos, making it super-easy to find the one you're looking for. Type in "cat" for instance and it'll search through them all and find every relevant photo (that could be a lot for some people). It will also identify people and group them together; once you give the group a name, you can then search for all photos featuring a particular family member or friend.
It's also now a decent photo editing and sharing service. Once you've uploaded a photo, you can edit it by cropping and tweaking colors. Once the editing is done, you can create albums of photos and video that can be shared publicly or with specific Google users. In our roundup of the best photo editing software, we named Google Photos best for sharing. And, it's available for both Android and iPhone users.
Google keeps adding new features too. For example, if Google Photos sees that a particular friend is in your photo, it will offer to share it with them. It can also automatically colorize black-and-white images, too. For more information, here's our complete guide to Google Photos. If you have a Google Assistant-enabled smart display, such as the Google Nest Hub or the Google Nest Hub Max, you can also sync your Google Photos with the display, so they'll show up on the screen.
Google Photos used to offer unlimited space and uploads, up to a maximum resolution of 16MP and video at 1080p. But, starting in June of 2021, any photos you upload from a non-Pixel device will count against your free 15GB Google Drive limit. Anyone using a Pixel 2-5 will be unaffected, so long as they stick to High or Express quality uploads. If you want to store bigger images or video files, you'll need to pay for space on Google Drive, which starts at $1.99 / £1.99 a month for 100GB.
4. Amazon Prime Photos
Unlimited photo storage for Amazon Prime members
Specifications
Free subscription: n/a
Starting subscription price: $120/year (unlimited)
Reasons to buy
+Unlimited storage +Auto-tagging of photos and videos +Decent sharing options
Reasons to avoid
-No free tier -Amazon Prints not very good
Amazon Prime Photos is Amazon's photo storage site for Prime members. (Prime membership costs $119/ £79 year.) The service lets you store and share unlimited photos on your desktop, smartphone or tablet, and automatically tags images and videos, such as by animal type, person, and location. You can also order photo prints, cards, calendars and more — all with free shipping. It's too bad that Amazon Prints sits at the bottom of our best photo books list.
Users can invite up to five friends or family members to receive unlimited photo storage and collect photos in a Family Vault, and you can show photos on the Echo Show or Fire TV. That might be a good way to share the latest family snaps with the grandparents. Amazon has added a feature called Groups that allows you to share photos with a larger group, which is useful if you are involved in a club or society.
Read our full Amazon Photos review .
5. Apple iCloud
A no-brainer photo storage backup option for iPhone owners
Specifications
Free subscription: 5GB
Starting subscription price: $12/year (50GB)
Reasons to buy
+Easy to add photos from multiple users +Simple sharing tools +Tagging of people/places/things
Reasons to avoid
-No Android version
Apple's iCloud service integrates with its own Apple Photos software on Macs and iOS devices, although you can use the basic features on a Windows PC. You can upload photos to the free 5GB of space and share them in an online photo stream that can be viewed in Apple Photos or as a web page. Photos can be tagged with names and locations, and other iCloud users can also add their photos. That's a neat trick for creating a photo record from multiple photographers — say, of a party or concert everyone attended. Apple Photos will also identify and group images with similar faces, which you can tag with a person's name and contact info.
If you run out of space, Apple offers three additional tiers: 50GB for 99 cents/month, 200GB for $2.99/month, and 2TB for $9.99/month. The latter two plans can be shared with other family members. Note also that Apple recently rolled out a feature to let iCloud users easily transfer photos and video to Google Photos — which might be worth checking out if you're running short of space and haven't already maxed out your Google storage.
6. Adobe Portfolio
A good photo storage option for Adobe CC subscribers
Specifications
Free subscription: none
Starting subscription price: $120/year (20GB)
Reasons to buy
+Multiple storage options +Comes with subscription to Adobe programs
Reasons to avoid
-Pricey for casual users
Adobe offers its Portfolio website creator and photo storage service to users of its Creative Cloud software subscription service, which provides access to programs like Photoshop and Lightroom.
The starting plan is $9.99/month and includes 20GB of storage, as well as Adobe Fonts, Photoshop and Lightroom. A Photoshop-only plan comes with 100GB of storage for $20.99/month, while a Lightroom-only plan with 1TB of storage is $9.99/month.
If you really want to splash out then the top-tier plan is $52.99/month, and includes 100GB of cloud storage, plus all of Adobe's apps, including Illustrator, InDesign, Photoshop, Premiere Pro, After Effects, and more.
It's well worth a try, particularly if you are already paying for a Creative Cloud subscription. Individual photos and events can be tagged and labeled with captions and the presentation is clean and easy to use — no surprise, given that it's aimed at professional photographers marketing their services on Adobe's Behance website. Still, it would also work well for amateurs looking for a clean, simple way to show off their work.
7. ImageShack
Unlimited photo storage for a good price
Specifications
Free subscription: none
Starting subscription price: $3.99/month, $37.99/year (unlimited)
Reasons to buy
+No free tier
Reasons to avoid
-Available on Android, iOS, Windows, MacOS
Although it lacks a free tier, ImageShack's starting subscription — $3.99/month, or $37.99/year for unlimited photos — is pretty generous. With that, you also get the ability to watermark photos, embed photos, and share them. The Pro ($29.99/month) and Premium ($99.99/month) tiers add additional bandwidth for users to view and download your photos, plus dedicated support, a dynamic image resizer, and API access. Regardless of the plan, photos are limited to 25MB in size, which could be a hindrance to professional photographers.
ImageShack also lets you tag photos, and follow other photographers on its site. And another nice extra is that there are apps for Android, iOS, Mac, and Windows that let you automatically upload and back up photos to your ImageShack account.
8. Photobucket
A plethora of editing and ecommerce tools for pros
Specifications
Free subscription: 250 photos
Starting subscription price: $71.88/year
Reasons to buy
+Lots of editing tools +Easy to sell prints
Reasons to avoid
-Intrusive ads on free version
The free version of Photobucket offers photo storage for 250 photos, though it comes with very intrusive ads, including pop-ups that obscure your images. There are three levels of paid, ad-free service: Beginner (25GB of storage for $5.99/month), Intermediate (250GB for $7.99 a month) and Expert (unlimited storage for $12.99/month). If you pay for an annual subscription, the cost drops to $5.39/month for Beginner, $7.19 for Intermediate, and $11.69 for Expert.
All of these plans allow you to show the photos on a third-party site, which is useful if you want to put the photos on a social network site that doesn't have its own image-uploading feature.
Photobucket has a generous collection of editing tools through a simple, easy-to-use interface. This list includes unusual tools like the smart color brush, which selectively adds color back into a black-and-white image.
Once you have edited your photos, you can add basic tags and organize them into albums or stories, the latter of which is a neat scrolling presentation of photos and accompanying text. Photobucket also provides extensive support for selling prints: you can buy individual photos, photo books (starting at $1.99) or even things like fleece blankets and tablet cases with your photos on them.
9. SmugMug
Lots of ecommerce tools for pro photographers
Specifications
Free subscription: none
Starting subscription price: : $48/year
Reasons to buy
+Lots of templates +Ecommerce tools +Unlimited storage
Reasons to avoid
-No free subscription
SmugMug is another design-focused photo storage site that offers a stylish home for your photos, with a custom homepage (such as richardb.smugmug.com) and many well-made design templates. Against that, SmugMug costs more than most of the services in our list. There is no free version (though there is a 14-day free trial) and the cheapest level costs $8 per month (or $55/year). That rises to $432/year for the Pro plan, which offers professional features such as ecommerce tools.
Regardless of the plan, you get a lot for your money, with unlimited storage of photos (each up to 500MB in size) and 1080p videos, and a good range of editing tools that are simple to use but powerful. These won't replace Photoshop in a professional photographer's toolbox, but they are good enough to fix most common photography issues and tweak a photo.
10. Dropbox
Generous photo storage, but no tagging or editing features
Specifications
Free subscription: 2GB
Starting subscription price: : $120/year (2TB)
Reasons to buy
+Good sharing options +Lots of storage space
Reasons to avoid
-No tagging of photos -No editing features
Dropbox offers support for photo storage, with its Android and iOS apps automatically uploading photos from mobile devices. You can also upload images from your computer to Dropbox as you would with any other files. Once photos are in the cloud, you can create and share basic slideshows that anybody can access, or share the files directly with other Dropbox users.
Unfortunately, there is no tagging, no printing and no way to edit photos online. Dropbox does offer a free collaborative editing tool, called Dropbox Paper, that is rather like Google Docs, but this doesn't offer photo-editing features. As such, Dropbox is a good option for photographers who want to back up photos, but not for those who want to catalog and permanently store their images.
Dropbox offers a free 2GB plan; a 2TB plan costs $9.99/month, and includes 30 days of version history and file recovery. The Pro Plan ($16.58/month) gets you 3TB of storage, but 180 days of file recovery, as well as a host of other features. Here is a list of all of Dropbox's storage plans.
11. Facebook
Free photo storage, but images get compressed
Specifications
Free subscription: unlimited
Starting subscription price: : n/a
Reasons to buy
+Free to use +Facial recognition auto-tags people +Easy to share with others on Facebook
Reasons to avoid
-It's Facebook -Images get compressed
The big kahuna of social sites also offers a surprisingly good set of photo storage, sharing and editing tools, with some caveats. After uploading photos from a cellphone, web browser or desktop client, you can create albums, add captions and tag photos by date, location or the people in the pictures. Face recognition has also been added; it will try to recognize the faces in your shots and tag those people if they are on Facebook. However, Facebook does shrink the images to fit onto the page; Facebook recommends sizing pictures to 720 or 960 pixels wide. You can use 2048-pixel-wide images if you select the high-quality upload option, but if the image is larger than 100 kb, it will get compressed for viewing.
Another downside is that there is no way to share the original-size photo. But if a lot of your family members and friends are already on Facebook, it's a great way to share casual shots or family photos.
How to pick the best photo storage site for you
To be consider one of the best photo storage sites, a service should offer six things:
- Value: It should have enough storage to keep all of your photos in one place over the years at a low cost.
- Quality: Your photos should be preserved in all their original high-res glory, not compressed beyond recognition.
- Ease of use: You need to be able to upload photos easily and edit them.
- Ease of access: Finding photos by date, tags or other means should be achieved without hassle.
- Shareability: A good photo site makes sharing photos as easy as taking them, allowing you to post pictures to sites like Facebook, Twitter and others.
- Printability: You or someone else who likes your photo should be able to buy a print or put together a photo book easily.
How we test photo storage sites
To find out which photo sites offer the best bang for your buck, we tested a number of them by uploading an assortment of photos from our camera reviews, tagging and organizing them as the site recommended. We also evaluated how well a site's auto-tagging feature worked, if available, and looked at if a site stored our images at their full resolution.
We then looked at the various ways we could share and print photos, to determine which site offers the best and easiest-to-use range of features.
Also part of our evaluation was the cost of storage, for both free and paid tiers. While this wasn't the determining factor — organizational and sharing features were given a higher priority — it did count in our overall rating. With all those factors considered, we were able to compile our list of the best photo storage sites.
Related content:
- The best cloud storage for photos and pictures: free and paid
- How to choose a cloud storage and backup provider
- 5 things to consider when selecting your next online storage provider
- How to edit photos in Microsoft Paint
Michael A. Prospero is the deputy editor at Tom's Guide overseeing the home, smart home, drones, and fitness/wearables categories, as well as all buying guides and other evergreen content. When he's not testing out the latest running watch, skiing or training for a marathon, he's probably using the latest sous vide machine or some other cooking gadget.
Where Can I Store All My Photos and Videos
Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/best-picks/best-photography-sites
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