Most people overestimate. A typical phone photo runs 2 to 5 MB, so 100 GB holds roughly 20,000 to 50,000 photos. Add a few thousand short videos and you're somewhere around 250 GB. Documents, music, and app exports rarely move the needle. A good rule: open the storage breakdown on your phone or laptop, look at what you've accumulated over the last five years, and pick the tier above that number. You can change tiers later, so you don't need to guess perfectly.
For one person backing up photos and documents, 100 GB usually lasts a few years and 250 GB covers most heavy phone users. If you also keep video projects, RAW photo files, or full-resolution camera exports, you'll want 400 GB or more. The honest test is to look at the storage already used on your phone, laptop, and old external drives, add them up, and add about 25 percent headroom. If that total is under 100 GB, the 100 GB tier is plenty.
StorageBites starts at $1 per month for 100 GB, which works out to roughly one cent per GB. That is at or near the bottom of the consumer market for plans of this size with files encrypted at rest, and we don't know of a major provider that beats it for the 100 to 500 GB range with the same encryption and durability properties. Free promotional tiers exist (the 1 TB on Terabox, for example) but come with ads and trade-offs that are worth reading the fine print on.
Photos are just files, so the same per-GB math applies: at $1 per month for 100 GB, StorageBites is about $0.01 per GB. For comparison, iCloud's 50 GB plan is around $1 per month (roughly $0.02 per GB) and Google One's 100 GB plan is around $2 per month. If your photo library is under 100 GB, StorageBites is the cheapest paid option we're aware of among providers that encrypt files at rest. If your library is larger, the per-GB price stays flat as you move up our ladder.
Because it's easier to sell two SKUs than seven. Most providers offer a small free tier and then one big paid plan, usually 1 TB or 2 TB, so they don't have to think about pricing very hard. The result is that a lot of people who only need 200 or 300 GB end up paying for a full terabyte they'll never touch. StorageBites breaks the jump into seven tiers from 100 GB to 1 TB, in 150 GB steps, starting at $1 per month. You pay for the size you actually use.
When you sign in with Google, your account starts with a 30-day trial and a 5 GB storage cap, no card required. You can upload, download, and view files exactly like a paid user, just with a smaller cap. To keep going past 30 days or to store more than 5 GB, pick a tier and add a payment method. If you don't subscribe, your trial ends, uploads pause, and your existing files stay viewable and downloadable for a while. After 30 days of inactivity past trial end we send a final-notice email; if there's still no activity, the account and its files are deleted 44 days after that. Active paid accounts are never affected by these timers.
Yes. From your account page you can upgrade, downgrade, or cancel at any time. Upgrades take effect immediately, your storage cap goes up right away, and your bill is prorated for the rest of the current billing period. Downgrades take effect at the end of the period, so you keep the storage you paid for until then; the one condition is that your current usage has to fit inside the smaller tier (if you're using 400 GB, you can't drop to the 250 GB tier without deleting some files first). Cancel works the same way: files stay accessible until the period ends, and you can resubscribe before then without losing anything. Most providers also let you downgrade. Where we differ is the granularity: seven tiers in 150 GB steps means you can shave a dollar or two off your bill instead of jumping all the way back down to a free tier.
Those are good products, but they're built for a different job. Google Drive, Dropbox, and iCloud focus on live collaboration, sharing, and integration with their own ecosystems, and the price reflects that even if you only want a safe place for photos and files. Their paid ladders also tend to skip the middle. Google One starts around $2 per month for 100 GB and the next common step is about 2 TB. iCloud has a 50 GB tier for about $1 and a 200 GB tier for about $3, then jumps to roughly 2 TB. Dropbox effectively has no mid-size individual plan; its cheapest paid tier is about 2 TB for around $12 per month. If your needs sit between 100 GB and 1 TB, you usually overpay. StorageBites fills that gap with seven tiers in 150 GB steps and files encrypted in your browser before upload.
Each of those providers makes different tradeoffs and they're all reasonable choices depending on what you want. pCloud sells subscriptions and one-time lifetime plans starting around 500 GB; client-side encryption is a paid add-on (pCloud Crypto) rather than the default, and the tiers jump in big steps. Icedrive also offers subscriptions and lifetime plans, and its client-side encryption is built in (Twofish), which is a real strength; tiers tend to be 100 GB, 1 TB, and up, so there's not much in between. Backblaze sells an unlimited per-computer backup subscription, which is a different product shape: you pay a flat fee per machine to back up that whole machine, rather than picking a storage cap that holds files from any device. Terabox advertises 1 TB free, supported by ads, with a paid tier on top; the headline number is hard to beat, the tradeoffs are ad load and a different privacy posture, which is worth reading their current policy on. Compared to all four, StorageBites positions on a granular tier ladder (100 GB to 1 TB in 150 GB steps), AES-GCM encryption in the browser as the default for every file, redundant object storage with strong durability, and monthly billing with no lifetime contracts.
Your files are stored on a major third-party object storage provider with strong durability guarantees and built-in redundancy. Before any file leaves your device, your browser generates a per-file AES-GCM key and encrypts the file with it. What gets uploaded is ciphertext, so the storage operator only ever sees encrypted bytes. To make decryption work across your devices and let us serve thumbnails and streamed video, StorageBites manages the keys, wrapped under a managed key management service on our side. That means StorageBites itself has the cryptographic access required to decrypt your files, and we'd cooperate with valid legal requests. We don't claim to be zero-knowledge or end-to-end encrypted; if that's a hard requirement for you, you want a product like Cryptomator or rclone-crypt layered on top.