
The Amazon Photos app is available for Fire TV and Fire tablets, too. Each also offers dedicated apps for desktop, Android and iOS devices. Amazon Photos and Google Photos can both be accessed from any mainstream web browser.


Given Google's photo compression policy, this subscription may become essential if, say, you're an Adobe Lightroom user and you need to find the best ways to backup photos in original, full high-resolution.Īmazon’s approach is a little different: subscribers to the Amazon Prime service get unlimited storage of full-resolution photos for free as part of their package (plus 5GB for videos).

Plans start at $1.99 / £1.59 / AU$2.49 per month for 100GB of cloud space, going up to $10 / £7.99 / AU$12.49 per month for 2TB. With Google Photos, that means taking out a Google One subscription to increase your storage capacity across all Google products. So whichever service you choose to use, you’ll need to pay for additional space once you hit the complimentary limit. Google no longer offers unlimited free storage for 'high quality' photos: both 'original' and compressed photos now count towards your total. Google Photos vs Amazon Photos: price and storage capacityīoth Amazon Photos and Google Photos offer a first slice of photo storage for free: anyone with an Amazon account gets 5GB of cloud capacity, while anyone with a Google account gets a more generous 15GB.
