Update: We goofed up the iCloud Photo Library storage prices. The error has been fixed below. With rapidly expanding image and video collections, three things are hot on everyone’s wish list: constant and automatic backups to an offsite location, having your entire image and video library available on all your devices, and having the edits you make to an image on one device show up on your other devices. Both Apple Photos and Google Photos offer these insanely great, sanity-saving features, but how do the apps really stack up? I’ll put Apple Photos against Google Photos and discover just how similar (or different) they are when it comes to storage, importing, organizing, editing, sharing and creating projects. As you’re about to learn, Google Photos grants a couple of wishes that you didn’t know to ask for. Storage and cost Apple gives 5GB of free storage space to anyone who signs up for an iCloud account, but that storage is also used for your iOS device backups, documents, and your image/video library.

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If you’re the slightest bit snap-happy, you’ll blow through 5GB at warp speed, but you can buy more space. As of this writing, Apple’s monthly storage rates for are: • 5GB: Free • 50GB: $1 • 200GB: $3 • 1TB: $10 Raw files are welcome and your images are stored in their original size at full quality. Google Photos is free, with limitations. You can enjoy unlimited storage for images up to 16 megapixels (which far exceeds what today’s iOS devices can capture), and videos up to 1080p (4K videos are supported with the Google Originals plan, discussed momentarily). Images and videos that are bigger get downsized; however, everything is optimized (compressed) into high quality versions (this algorithm is applied in the cloud, not on your devices).

Raw files are stored as JPEGs on Google’s High Quality plan—that said, it’s next to impossible to spot any quality loss, especially if you’re viewing imagery on mobile devices. You can choose to store original images (raw files included) by choosing Google’s Originals plan. Google grants 15GB of free storage space to that end, though your Gmail (messages and attachments) and Google Drive storage space count against it.

As of this writing, Google’s are: • 100GB: $2 • 1TB: $10 • 10TB: $100 • 20TB: $200 • 30TB: $300 Storage space pricing for safeguarding your originals is nearly the same until you reach a terabyte, at which point Google’s pricing is half that of Apple’s and, as of this writing, Apple’s storage options top out at 1TB whereas Google Photos offers up to 30TB. If you’re okay with Google’s high quality plan, you don’t have to pay a cent (unless you routinely make giant prints, this is a great trade-off). Importing Both Apple Photos and Google Photos sport mobile and desktop methods for importing and viewing your library. With the Google Photos app on your iOS device, any picture and videos you take (or save to the device) automatically show up in Google Photos like they do in Apple Photos (via iCloud Photo Library or My Photo Stream). Importing images on your desktop works similarly in both apps—you can drag and drop pictures (or folders of them) into a web browser pointed at or onto the Apple Photos window or its app icon (though by default the app opens automatically whenever you connect an iOS device to your Mac). Google Photos Backup preferences lets you designate devices and folders for auto uploading. If you include your iPhoto or Photos library, anything you import into them gets uploaded to Google Photos, too (this trick doesn’t work with Adobe Lightroom catalogs).

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If you download the desktop app, you can designate specific devices (cameras and storage cards) and desktop folders for automatic uploading to Google Photos. Apple’s older iPhoto has a hidden folder that you can manually drop goodies into for automatic importing into the app—Control-click the iPhoto library and choose Expand Package Contents to find the auto import folder—Photos doesn’t (yet) and you can’t (yet) set up an Automator workflow to do it either. If you shoot in raw format and you want Google Photos to see edits you make in a raw processor (say, Adobe Lightroom or Camera Raw), you must export and upload the images as JPEGs (pushing your edits into the metadata in those apps won’t work).