But there's no way, even with my small two-person family operation, that we could use Dropbox for all our storage needs.
#How much for dropbox plans plus
I rely on my Plus account to keep all my main work-a-day document files in sync, and it works well. In the case of Dropbox, the actual technological solution is still quite viable. But if you have a lot to store, you run into both transmission time limitations and what I call the "cloud storage ceiling". If your needs are minimal, it's a great idea. one of the familyĬloud storage is turning out to be a mixed bet. Because neither Dropbox for Business plan will go back in time that far for you. If you're using the Business Standard or Advanced plan and you need to go back 121 days, you better have a DeLorean.
#How much for dropbox plans upgrade
I reached out to a Dropbox rep through chat and asked if it would be possible to upgrade the business account to what's called the "Extended Version History" option in the individual Plus plan. The 2017 Dropbox for Business Standard plan, and the new Advanced plan, both only provide 120 days of file recovery. Last year's Business Plan listed versioning as "unlimited file recovery." That meant you could go back for as long as the account had existed, and recover versions. This is in marked contrast to both the 2017 Business Standard and Advanced plans. But, if you want a year worth of versioning, you can add it for $39. Oh, and remember I said that not only did it cost more, but it offered less? That's next.įor the individual Plus plan, Dropbox offers 30 days of versioning. Yep, the new plan added a whole new digit to the cost.
This year, at $240/year per user, you're paying $1,200 for those same five users. If you had five users last year with so-called unlimited storage, you'd be paying $750. With three users, the Advanced plan is $720 while last year's Business plan with five users was $750.īoth last year's Business plan and this year's Advanced plan offer "unlimited storage," which is Dropbox-speak for "as much storage as we think you're really going to need, if you ask us nicely." So, at least there's not a 2TB-no-matter-what ceiling in the Advanced plan, compared to this year's Dropbox for Business Standard plan.īut let's compare users to users.
That means the base buy-in is a teensy bit less. But the new Advanced plan costs $240/year per user, instead of $150. The one good thing compared to 2016 is that you can get into the Advanced plan with only three users, compared to the required five for the 2016 Business plan.