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Google Drive

4.3
CategoryProductivity
Download5B+
PriceFree
RatedEveryone
RequiresAndroid 8.0+
DeveloperGoogle LLC

Screenshots

Google Drive screenshot
Google Drive screenshot
Google Drive screenshot
Google Drive screenshot
Google Drive screenshot
Google Drive screenshot

About this app

On most Android phones, Google Drive is already there before you install anything. It is the storage layer under Gmail attachments, Google Photos backups, Docs and Sheets, WhatsApp chat backups, and the files app on many devices, all drawing from the same free 15 GB allowance tied to your Google account. That integration is the product: Drive rarely wins on raw features, but it is where your files already are.

The app itself handles uploads, offline access, scanning paper documents, and shared folders competently. The questions worth asking are about the fine print: how sharing links behave when you create them, what Google's automated scanning does and does not look at, and how quickly that 15 GB fills once Gmail and Photos start counting against it. This review walks through each, plus when a Google One upgrade actually makes sense.

Backing up and reaching files anywhere

Documents uploaded from a computer are on your phone seconds later, and the document scanner turns paper receipts and contracts into searchable PDFs. For people living in the Google ecosystem, this is zero-setup infrastructure.

Collaborating on Docs and Sheets

Drive is the container for Google's office suite. Shared folders keep a team's files organised with per-person permissions, and comment notifications land in Gmail. Version history quietly saves you from most editing disasters.

Moving big files between people

A sharing link beats email attachments for anything over a few megabytes. You control whether recipients can view, comment, or edit, and links can be restricted to specific accounts rather than anyone who obtains them.

15 GB free, shared across services

The allowance covers Drive, Gmail, and original-quality Google Photos together. That is generous against rivals until you realise years of email and photo backups count too; the built-in storage manager shows what is eating the space.

Granular sharing controls

New shares default to restricted: only people you explicitly add can open the file. Making a link public is a deliberate switch, and viewer, commenter, and editor roles are enforced per person or per link.

Offline access

Marking a file as available offline keeps a synced copy on the device, and Docs, Sheets, and Slides can be edited offline with changes syncing later. It is opt-in per file, so mark what you need before a flight.

Built-in document scanner

The scan button captures paper documents with automatic edge detection and saves searchable PDFs straight to a folder you choose. Text inside scans becomes findable through Drive search, which makes it a genuinely useful filing system.

Privacy & Data Safety

Drive files are encrypted in transit and on Google's servers, but Google manages the keys, so this is not end-to-end encryption. Automated systems scan stored files for malware, spam, and illegal content such as child sexual abuse material; Google states that Drive content is not used to target advertising. For most users the practical risks are misconfigured sharing links and a compromised Google account rather than Google itself reading files.

  • Sharing defaults are sensible — new files are restricted to invited people — but a link set to 'anyone with the link' stays open to whoever it gets forwarded to until you change it back.
  • Google's automated abuse scanning can flag and lock files that violate its policies, and accounts have occasionally been suspended over false positives; keep a second copy of irreplaceable data outside any single provider.
  • There is no end-to-end encryption on consumer accounts; if you need Google to be unable to read a file, encrypt it yourself before uploading. Client-side encryption exists only on certain Workspace enterprise plans.
  • Third-party apps you have connected to Drive may retain broad access to files; audit them periodically under your Google account's security settings.

Advantages

  • 15 GB free remains among the most generous default allowances
  • Deep integration with Gmail, Photos, Docs, and Android itself
  • Reliable sharing with clear per-person permission roles
  • Strong search, including text inside scanned documents

Updates

Drive on Android updates every few weeks, though most meaningful change happens server-side across the whole Google ecosystem. Recent years have brought a redesigned home tab, better controls against unwanted shared files, and a steady accumulation of Gemini-branded AI features on paid tiers. The core sync-and-share behaviour is deliberately stable, which is what you want from storage.

  • Gemini AI features for summarising and querying files, mainly on paid plans
  • Spam and abuse controls for unsolicited shared files
  • Scanner, search, and interface refinements on Android

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

Judged as an app, Drive is dependable rather than exciting; judged as infrastructure, it is excellent. Files upload reliably, sharing permissions do what they say, and integration with the rest of Google removes friction nothing else can. The decisions that matter are policy ones: know that Google holds the encryption keys, review your sharing links occasionally, and watch the shared quota. For sensitive material, add your own encryption; for everything else, Drive is hard to argue against.

What works

  • 15 GB free remains among the most generous default allowances
  • Deep integration with Gmail, Photos, Docs, and Android itself
  • Reliable sharing with clear per-person permission roles
  • Strong search, including text inside scanned documents

What to know

  • Gmail and Photos silently consume the same 15 GB quota
  • No end-to-end encryption for consumer accounts
  • Automated policy scanning can lock files, with an imperfect appeals process
  • Sync controls on Android are less flexible than the desktop client

FAQ

Is 15 GB of Google Drive storage really free?

Yes, permanently, but it is a combined quota covering Drive files, Gmail messages and attachments, and Google Photos backups stored at original quality. Heavy email users can fill it without uploading a single file. Google One plans start cheaply at 100 GB and are shared across the same services.

Does Google read my Drive files?

Humans do not browse your files. Automated systems scan uploads for malware and content that violates Google's policies, including known child abuse imagery, and Google says Drive content is not used for advertising. Because Google controls the encryption keys, lawful government requests can compel access, unlike with end-to-end encrypted services.

Can I use Google Drive offline?

Yes, selectively. Mark individual files as available offline in the Android app, and enable offline mode for Docs, Sheets, and Slides to keep editing without a connection. Changes sync automatically once you are back online. Files you never marked remain cloud-only, so prepare before travelling.

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