Skip to Main Content
PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

The Best Online Photo Storage Services for 2024

Don’t leave your photos scattered on various cameras and phones. Use one of our favorite online photo storage services to keep them all together, accessible from anywhere, and easy to share.

By Michael Muchmore
Updated October 10, 2024
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS: HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
42 YEARS
40,000+ REVIEWS
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

The best online photo storage services give you a place to consolidate and organize all the images from your phone and camera. These services have apps that run on your mobile device and computer to automatically upload photos to the same online location. The best ones also back up your photos in case something happens to your computer or phone, while others include photo editing tools and effects. Most provide a small amount of cloud storage for free, and all let you sort photos into albums and share them with friends. We've been testing these services for more than a decade, and our current favorites are Google Photos for its generous free storage and Flickr for its community features. But those aren't the only services we recommend, so read on for more of our top picks.

Our Top Tested Picks

Adobe Lightroom
Best for Serious Amateur Photographers

Adobe Lightroom

Apple iCloud Photos
Best for iPhone Users

Apple iCloud Photos

Flickr photos
Best for Photo Sharing Community

Flickr

Google Photos
Best for Auto Effects and AI Search

Google Photos

Microsoft OneDrive Photos
Best for Windows and Office Users

Microsoft OneDrive

Mylio Photo Storage
Best for Privately Storing Photos on Your Own Devices

Mylio

SmugMug Gallery
Best for Pro Photographers

SmugMug

Deeper Dive: Our Top Tested Picks
Adobe Lightroom

Best for Serious Amateur Photographers

Adobe Lightroom

4.5 Outstanding
  • Simple, clear interface
  • Syncs photos to cloud storage for access on other devices
  • Light, color, and detail adjustments equal to Lightroom Classic's
  • Powerful raw profiles and filters
  • Strong community features
  • Subscription only
  • No local printing or plug-in support

Pros have long used Adobe Lightroom Classic, but the app's younger sibling, appeals more to amateur photographers. It does so by evolving the older software to the online and mobile worlds. It shines for automatically uploading photos you choose to the cloud and syncing any edits you make. The Lightroom interface has a simpler and slicker design than Classic but includes nearly all of Adobe’s advanced editing tools. However, it lacks support for plug-ins and tethered shooting.

Lightroom has loads of help and tutorials, as well as social features, including Share to Community, which lets others edit your photos. Users can share their step-by-step editing processes as well. You can also share photos so that only people you approve can edit them or simply get a link to an online-hosted view of the photo.

Lightroom's search function lets you look for things and people that the program’s AI detects. You can also filter your search based on camera, lens, or settings. The software supports raw camera files and can now output to new HDR formats like AVIF and JXL. Lightroom costs $9.99 per month for 1TB of online storage; there's no free account, but you can get a seven-day trial.

Apple iCloud Photos

Best for iPhone Users

Apple iCloud Photos

Using iCloud to store your photos makes a lot of sense if you use all Apple devices. It reliably uploads all photos shot on an iPhone to the cloud and gives editing access to them on the Photos app on Macs. And it isn’t exclusively for people who use Macs either—there's an iCloud app for Windows 11 that integrates with Microsoft Photos.

iCloud Photos automatically curates so-called Memories—event- and date-based albums it thinks you want to revisit. You can easily share photos and albums with web links, and you can filter by iPhone-specific photo types, such as Portrait and Live Photos. The web interface, however, is lacking compared with most other online photo storage services. For example, you can’t search for photos, and you don’t get online editing tools.

To store more than 5GB of photos, you need to pay, and prices are on par with other services. You get 50GB of iCloud+ for 99 cents per month, 200GB for $2.99, 2TB for $9.99, and 6TB for $29.99. If you have a free account and use up all 5GB, you get constant nags to upgrade. However, I’ve found that any old photos that I uploaded while I was paying are still accessible after canceling my subscription.

Flickr photos

Best for Photo Sharing Community

Flickr

Though it may seem like a blast from the past, Flickr is still going strong, especially since its acquisition by pro photo storage service SmugMug. It’s the best service for people who want to be part of a photography community.

Flickr is loaded with features that let you organize and share your photo collection. You don’t have to make your photos public when uploading to Flickr, however. As with most services here, it can automatically upload any photos you take on your smartphone or add them to a folder on your computer. Unlike Instagram, Flickr is all about photos—not memes, selfies, or political ads. It does, however, let you scroll a feed of photographers, groups, and topics that you follow. Also, unlike Instagram, Flickr lets you view full-size images and, if the photographer allows it, even download them.

You can join interest groups, such as bird photography, where you can submit your photos for more views. People can like or comment on your pictures and even send you direct messages. A longtime favorite feature in Flickr is Explore, where you might have your photo highlighted as one of the top-liked images on the site.

You get 1,000 photo uploads for free, but you need a Pro account to store most collections. Pro gives you unlimited online photo storage at full resolution, no banner ads, the ability to upload NSFW images, more account traffic stats, priority support, photo sale links, and discounts on book printing, SmugMug, Phlearn, and other photo services. The Pro tier costs $72.99 per year or $132.99 for two years. There’s also a $9.49-per-month option, but that doesn’t make much sense if the idea is to store your photo collection over the long term.

Microsoft OneDrive Photos

Best for Windows and Office Users

Microsoft OneDrive

5.0 Exemplary
  • Excellent interface
  • Clients for Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows
  • Well integrated with Windows and Microsoft 365
  • Strong online photo presentation and management
  • Powerful file sharing and collaborative editing
  • Less free storage than some competitors
  • Doesn't back up all folders on drive

Most people probably don’t think of Microsoft OneDrive as an online photo storage service, but it's a good one. Among its photo editing capabilities are sliders for highlights, shadows, color saturation, and effect filters. It lets you find images based on objects or people in them and automatically applies editable keyword tags. OneDrive shows a small map for photos that include location metadata (most smartphone photos do). And, as with Google Photos and Apple iCloud Photos, it surfaces highlights from past years, lets you build albums, and sort your library by image type.

Google Photos and OneDrive are better choices than Apple iCloud Photo if you need online photo editing or the ability to search for particular photos on the web interface, though iCloud’s integration in iOS could make it a preferable option for some iPhone users. OneDrive integrates with the File Explorer and the Microsoft Photos app included in Windows, but clients that automatically upload photos to the cloud are available for Android, iOS, and even macOS. Free users get 5GB storage, a $19.99-per-year Microsoft 365 Basic account gets you 100GB, and a $69.99-per-year tier unlocks 1TB of storage and access to the Microsoft Office apps.

Mylio Photo Storage

Best for Privately Storing Photos on Your Own Devices

Mylio

Unlike the other services here, Mylio is a photo organization and syncing application that doesn’t require you to upload your pictures to its servers. The base (and free) Mylio Photos product works on only one device at a time with no syncing, but Mylio Photos+ ($119.99 per year or $219.99 for two years) syncs up all the devices you install it on. So, for example, if a photo is on your phone, you can download it to the desktop Mylio app without the need for central servers from the company; the photos stay on your devices. This configuration is good for your privacy since you’re not putting your photos up on a big company’s servers.

The Plus version also adds a DeDupe tool, automatic local backups, shared albums, and a SpaceSaver feature that lets you fit more photos on devices with limited storage. Mylio lets you import your social media photos, though it’s also intended to work with scans of printed photos or negatives, letting you edit them and apply people and place information.

The free and Plus versions let you do non-destructive photo editing, meaning they preserve the original images. You also get organizing tools like face recognition, ratings, and color coding. Mylio intakes and organizes photos impressively quickly, giving you a map view and fast search. It works with raw camera files as well as most other common image formats. A Mylio photo collection can be divided into Spaces, such as Family, Work, Private, and Guest. Mylio’s interface isn’t as slick as that of Google Photos or Lightroom. But if you don’t want to have to store your photos on a company’s servers and need lots of organization tools, Mylio is worth a look.

SmugMug Gallery

Best for Pro Photographers

SmugMug

SmugMug is one of the best online storage services for professional photographers. It lets you store photos online with all your metadata, as well as present your portfolios, sell photos, and advertise your services. Subscribers get unlimited photo storage at full resolution, even for raw camera files, though raw support comes with an extra charge (starting at $3 per month for 500MB).

SmugMug also gives you custom portfolio templates to showcase your work. You can add your logo and social media links to your portfolio page. Separate private galleries let you share photos from jobs, such as wedding shoots. SmugMug displays and lets you search by full EXIF metadata, and you can add titles, captions, and keywords to image pages, but there’s no AI-based auto-keyword tagging. You can, however, add watermarks to your pictures, control whether they appear in web searches, and limit the download size. If you allow it, you can see a small map for photos’ geodata like that recorded by smartphones and cameras with GPS.

Like most of the best online photo storage services, SmugMug has mobile and desktop apps, as well as plug-ins that work with Adobe Lightroom Classic and Capture One.

Subscription prices are steeper than most online photo storage services, though you can get a 15-day free trial. The Portfolio account ($31 per month or $246 per year) lets you sell prints and digital downloads, as well as use watermark and theft-protection tools. The higher-level account, Pro, costs $45 per month or $384 per year, and it adds several more selling tools such as custom price lists for photos and galleries, marketing coupons, client favoriting, and customer download limits.

Buying Guide: The Best Online Photo Storage Services for 2024

Mobile Photo Editing Apps
(Credit: René Ramos/Shutterstock/Diego Thomazini)

Do More With Your Photos

Now that you know where to keep your pictures safely, you might be interested in the best software for editing photos. And be sure to read our guide to taking better smartphone photos. For more advanced info, read 10 beyond-basic digital photography tips.

Like What You're Reading?

Sign up for Lab Report to get the latest reviews and top product advice delivered right to your inbox.

This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.


Thanks for signing up!

Your subscription has been confirmed. Keep an eye on your inbox!

Sign up for other newsletters
Newsletter Pointer

About Michael Muchmore

Lead Software Analyst

PC hardware is nice, but it’s not much use without innovative software. I’ve been reviewing software for PCMag since 2008, and I still get a kick out of seeing what's new in video and photo editing software, and how operating systems change over time. I was privileged to byline the cover story of the last print issue of PC Magazine, the Windows 7 review, and I’ve witnessed every Microsoft win and misstep up to the latest Windows 11.

Prior to my current role, I covered software and apps for ExtremeTech, and before that I headed up PCMag’s enterprise software team, but I’m happy to be back in the more accessible realm of consumer software. I’ve attended trade shows of Microsoft, Google, and Apple and written about all of them and their products.

I’m an avid bird photographer and traveler—I’ve been to 40 countries, many with great birds! Because I’m also a classical fan and former performer, I’ve reviewed streaming services that emphasize classical music.

Read Michael's full bio

Read the latest from Michael Muchmore