5 Key Takeaways
- Android backups now count against Google's 15GB free storage as of July 7, 2026.
- The change adds about 40MB on average, but can be more for heavy users.
- Google provides new granular controls to selectively backup SMS, call logs, and settings.
- Users near the storage limit may need to clean up or consider Google One subscription.
- This aligns Google's policy closer to Apple's iCloud while still offering twice the free space.
Android Backups Are Now Eating Into Your Free 15GB of Google Storage
A quiet policy shift means your texts, call logs, and device settings now share the same storage pool as your emails and photos.
If you use an Android phone and rely on Google's free cloud storage tier to keep your data safe, a quiet rule change that took effect on July 7, 2026, could leave you scrambling for space. Phone backups that once glided under the radar of your storage cap are now being counted in full. In short, the texts you sent three years ago, the call logs you never think about, and even the arrangement of your home screen icons are about to compete for room with your Gmail archive, Google Drive files and Google Photos library. For anyone already hovering near the 15GB ceiling, this seemingly modest shift may be the nudge that pushes them over the edge—and into a paid subscription.
The Free 15GB That Powers a Digital Life
To understand why this matters, it helps to revisit what Google offers for free. Every Google Account comes with 15GB of storage shared across Gmail, Google Drive and Google Photos. That 15GB has been the quiet backbone of countless digital lives. It holds years of email correspondence, work documents, vacation snapshots and, until now, a generous portion of your smartphone's backup data that wasn't counted at all.
For context, Google has been tightening the definition of "free" for years. The most dramatic moment came in June 2021, when Google Photos ended its unlimited free storage for high-quality images. Suddenly every photo and video uploaded began chewing into that same 15GB pool. The change forced millions of users to delete old media, invest in external drives or sign up for Google One, the company's paid storage plan. Now, history is repeating itself, this time with Android backups.
What Android Backups Used to Look Like
Before July 7, 2026, Android's backup system treated your data with a light touch when it came to storage accounting. The service was designed to automatically save key pieces of your phone's state—system settings, app lists, call logs, SMS messages and device preferences—so that if you upgraded to a new phone or had to reset your current one, you could restore everything seamlessly. Under the old rules, only media files such as images and videos uploaded to Google Photos or attachments sent via MMS were counted against your 15GB allowance. Everything else existed in a kind of limbo that didn't touch your quota.
That created a perception, and often a reality, that Android backups were essentially "free" from a storage standpoint. You could accumulate years of text messages, keep a detailed record of every call you ever made or missed, and preserve the exact layout of your apps without worrying about Gmail warnings telling you that you were low on space. The backup simply ran in the background, invisible and costless.
What's Changing, and When
As of July 7, 2026, that era is over. Google has updated its policy so that all Android backup data now counts toward your Google Account storage. Suddenly, every piece of information your phone sends to the cloud for safekeeping will take a small bite out of your 15GB.
Specifically, the following data types are now part of the storage equation:
- The actual text content of SMS and MMS messages
- Your complete call history
- Device settings, including wallpapers, ringtones and system preferences
- Information about installed apps and the app data tied to them
That list covers much of what makes a phone feel like your phone. Move to a new handset and you want those texts to follow you, your call log to be intact and your wallpaper to be exactly where you left it. Until now, that convenience came without a storage cost. From July 7 onward, it comes with a small but real price tag.
How Much Space Will It Actually Take?
Google has been quick to reassure users that the impact will be modest. A company spokesperson provided a clear statement on the matter:
"Android backup lets you save the data on your phone to your Google Account so you can easily restore it or set up a new device. We've updated our policy so that all Android backup data now counts toward Google Account storage. We expect this to only add 40MB on average. We're also giving you more transparency and new controls that let you select which data and apps you want to back up."
The key figure is that 40MB average. On the surface, 40MB sounds negligible when you have 15,000MB to play with. That's the equivalent of a handful of high-resolution photos or a few minutes of video. For someone who keeps plenty of breathing room in their storage, the change will likely go unnoticed.
But averages can hide a lot of variation. A user who preserves ten years of SMS conversations, perhaps including thousands of messages with image previews and links, will see a significantly larger footprint. Call logs that span many years, especially for those who never delete them, can also swell beyond the typical size. App data can balloon quickly if an application stores significant local information—think of note-taking apps, game progress or offline maps. While Google's 40MB estimate reflects the typical backup, outliers exist, and they are the ones most likely to feel the squeeze.
Even a genuine 40MB bump can be the proverbial last straw for an account that is already sitting at 14.97GB of usage. Google's low-storage warnings don't discriminate; once you cross the threshold, you'll start seeing alerts in Gmail, notifications on your phone and prompts to buy more space. The psychological effect is powerful. That tiny increase can turn a comfortable free experience into a nagging commercial one.
Why Now? Google's Storage Strategy
This move fits into a broader pattern. Cloud storage is not free to provide, and the cost of maintaining exabytes of user data continues to rise. By gradually bringing more types of data under the storage cap, Google both manages its infrastructure costs and gently guides users toward its subscription offerings. Google One, which starts with a 100GB plan for a relatively small monthly fee, has become a significant revenue stream. As more daily activities generate digital exhaust—higher-resolution photos, 4K videos, ever-growing email archives—the 15GB ceiling becomes easier to hit without any policy changes at all. This new rule simply accelerates the moment when free users confront the limits.
Yet Google is not alone in this approach. Apple's iCloud provides just 5GB of free storage, and iOS backups have long counted everything—messages, settings, app data—against that paltry allowance. Android users, in contrast, enjoyed a more generous carve-out for years. The new alignment brings Google's practice closer to the industry norm, while still leaving it twice as generous as Apple's free tier.
New Controls to Keep Your Backup Lean
Recognizing that users will want to manage what gets backed up, Google is introducing a set of granular controls that give you direct power over each category. While the ability to select which apps are included in backups has existed for some time, you will soon see dedicated toggles for three additional components: SMS and MMS messages, call history, and device settings.
These switches mean you can decide that call logs aren't essential to preserve or that you'd rather not pay the storage price for keeping a decade of text messages in the cloud. For someone determined to stay within the 15GB free limit, turning off the backup of call history and message texts could free up meaningful space, especially if you also pair that decision with a periodic local cleanup of your phone's message storage.
The new controls are expected to appear directly within the Android settings menu, under the backup or Google settings section, depending on your device and software version. They are designed to be self-explanatory, with simple on/off toggles and a brief description of what each toggle does. Google's emphasis on transparency is a welcome gesture, even if it arrives alongside a change that makes the free tier a little less free.
What This Means for the Average User
For someone with a lightly-used Google account—perhaps a few hundred emails, a couple of dozen photos and a clean inbox—the entire discussion may be academic. The 40MB bump simply won't register. But for many long-time Android users, the situation is different. The same account that has weathered a decade of Gmail subscriptions, newsletters, large attachments and automatic photo uploads is likely already pressed for space. Google's own storage management page often reveals that "Dark Sky" photos from 2018, work files shared years ago and promotional emails with heavy graphics are the silent culprits eating up gigabytes.
With the new backup policy, those users must now also think about the underside of their phone's data. A few megabytes here, a few there—they add up. The person who meticulously archives every SMS from a loved one or keeps complete call records for business purposes may suddenly find those archives costing them capacity that was once free.
There's also the subtle danger of silent backup failure. If you exceed your storage limit, Google will eventually stop syncing new data. Your future texts, call logs and settings won't be backed up. You might not notice until the day your phone breaks or you switch devices and the restore process comes up incomplete. At that point, the missing data is gone for good.
Steps You Can Take Right Now
If you want to stay on the free plan while preserving what matters, start with a storage audit. Head to one.google.com/storage to see a breakdown of what's consuming your quota across Gmail, Drive and Photos. Gmail can often be tamed by searching for emails with large attachments and deleting them or saving the files locally. Google Drive may hold forgotten PDFs, ZIP files and duplicate documents. Google Photos remains the biggest space hog for most people; cleaning out blurry shots, screenshots and near-identical images can recover gigabytes.
Next, dive into the backup settings on your Android device. If the new granular toggles are available, you can disable SMS/MMS backup and call log backup instantly, keeping only the data you truly need. If those toggles haven't rolled out to your device yet, you can still manage which apps are included and consider turning off backup for apps whose data you can easily recreate.
It's also wise to periodically delete old text threads, especially those heavy with images and attachments. Your phone's messaging app might have a "delete old messages" setting that automatically clears conversations older than a certain period. On the call log side, clearing out entries older than six months or a year can keep that dataset slim without much practical loss.
For those who find that 15GB is no longer a workable limit, upgrading to Google One is a straightforward option. The 100GB plan typically costs $1.99 per month and can be shared with up to five family members, effectively pooling storage. That extra headroom covers backups, emails and photos with room to spare, and you also gain access to features like Google Photos editing tools and a VPN for Android. While it means trading the pure free experience for a subscription, it also removes the low-storage anxiety that can now be triggered by something as routine as a few new texts.
The Bigger Picture
Google's decision to count all Android backup data against the free 15GB is not a shocking reversal, but it is a meaningful step in the slow evolution of what "free" actually means in the cloud. The 15GB baseline hasn't changed, but the definition of what stays outside it keeps shrinking. For millions of people, the shift will pass unnoticed, swallowed by digital lives that never approach the ceiling. For others, it will be the prompt to finally clean house or to accept that a few dollars a month is a fair price for seamless backup and peace of mind.
In the end, the new policy is less a draconian crackdown and more a gentle realignment—one that brings Android in line with the philosophy that if you want to hold on to everything, you eventually pay for the shelf space. The good news is that Google has given you the tools to control exactly what you keep, and the 40MB average bump is unlikely to derail anyone who pays even casual attention to their storage. But if you've been ignoring that "storage almost full" notification for months, now is the moment to open the settings, take stock and make a choice. Your backups, and the memories they hold, will thank you.
Published · July 2026 · A closer look at Google's evolving cloud storage landscape