OneDrive, Box, Dropbox, Office 365, Google Drive: How Their Storage Compares

We took a look at a few common cloud-based storage services and compare their free offerings, their lowest paid offerings, and their feature sets. This way, it would be easy to see which cloud-based storage system works best for different users and their budgets.

Lisa Schmeiser

May 23, 2016

4 Min Read
OneDrive, Box, Dropbox, Office 365, Google Drive: How Their Storage Compares

When taking Richard Hay's app tour of the new Dropbox app, I was particularly struck by his assessment of whether or not Dropbox was actually a good value for customers. Dropbox is ubiquitous in some circles, but does ubiquity mean quality or value? I decided to take a look at a few common cloud-based storage services and compare their free offerings, their lowest paid offerings, and their feature sets. This way, it would be easy to see which cloud-based storage system works best for different users and their budgets.

I also included the scenario Rich suggests in his app tour: If you pony up for an Office 365 subscription, not only do you get a terabyte of storage, you also get to use a suite of office tools. Since he brought office apps into the discussion, it made sense to see how Google's free storage offering stacked up, since that does have an accompanying office-apps suite.

Below are the comparisons among five different cloud-based storage services: Dropbox, Box, OneDrive, Office 365 and Google Drive. I looked at ten basics that every service should cover, from file size to cost per gigabyte to ease of automation. 

 

Free account storage limits

Dropbox

2 GB

Box

10 GB

OneDrive

5 GB

Office 365

N/A

Google Drive

15 GB

 

Maximum file size

Dropbox

The sum total of all files uploaded has to be smaller than your account's storage quota; otherwise, there's no limit on individual file size.

Box

250 MB file free account/ 5GB for paid account.

OneDrive

10 GB

Office 365

10 GB

Google Drive

For documents, up to 50 GB if they're converted to Google Docs format; other file formats can be up to 5 TB (provided you have the space for 5 TB worth of documents).

 

Lowest paid plan for individual users

 

How much one gigabyte costs per month

Dropbox

1 penny per gigabyte

Box

10 cents per gigabyte

OneDrive

4 cents per gigabye

Office 365

< 1 penny per gigabyte (0.83 cents, in fact)

Google Drive

2 cents per gigabyte

 

Can you save things to the service from your desktop?

Dropbox

Yes.

Box

There's a lot of add-on apps to help with that.

OneDrive

Yes.

Office 365

Yes.

Google Drive

Yes -- you can drop-and-drag things right to your Google Drive.

 

Does it have a desktop app?

Dropbox

Yes, for Windows, Mac OS X or Linux.

Box

Yes, for Windows and Mac OS X.

OneDrive

Yes, for Windows and Mac OS X.

Office 365

Yes -- we're talking storage integration with OneDrive.

Google Drive

Yes, for Windows and Mac OS X.

 

Does it have a mobile app?

Dropbox

Yes.

Box

Yes.

OneDrive

Yes.

Office 365

Yes -- we're talking storage integration with OneDrive.

Google Drive

Yes.

 

What are the platforms for the mobile app?

Dropbox

iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Windows tablet.

Box

iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Blackberry.

OneDrive

iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Windows tablet.

Office 365

iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and Windows tablet.

Google Drive

iOs and Android.

 

Does it have a web-based interface too?

Dropbox

Yes.

Box

Yes.

OneDrive

Yes.

Office 365

Yes.

Google Drive

Yes.

 

Can you automate file backups via Zapier and IFTTT?

Dropbox

Yes.

Box

Yes.

OneDrive

Yes.

Office 365

Yes.

Google Drive

Yes.

 

Is it integrated with Microsoft products?

Dropbox

Yes -- the service is integrated with Office so you can open Office files in your Dropbox account, edit those files in your Office apps, and save them back to your Dropbox account.

Box

Yes -- you can use the Box for Office app on your PC to save your Office files to a Box account.

OneDrive

Yes, on account of it being a Microsoft product.

Office 365

Yes, on account of it being a Microsoft product.

Google Drive

As it turns out, yes.

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