What To Do If Your Google Drive Storage Is Full (Fix It Fast)

What To Do If Your Google Drive Storage Is Full: How To Fix It

  • Posted on May 22, 2026
  • 0 Min Read
What To Do If Your Google Drive Storage Is Full: How To Fix It

When your Google Drive storage is full, the problem is almost never just about having too many files in one place. Google splits your 15GB free quota across Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos, and all three fill up faster than most people realize.

WhatsApp backups, years of Gmail attachments, forgotten trash bins, and hidden app data all quietly eat into the same pool of storage. The good news is that once you know what’s actually causing it, fixing Google Drive storage issues is something you can work through in a single sitting.

The problem starts something like this, you open Google Drive to upload something, and there it is, that red warning telling you storage is full. You deleted a bunch of stuff last month.

So why is it still maxed out?

This is one of the most common frustrations Google users run into. And the reason it keeps happening is not that you are careless with files. It is that Google’s storage system is a lot less transparent than it should be.

This blog covers what is actually eating your space, how to free up Google Drive storage the right way, and how to set things up so you are not dealing with this again in a few months.

First, What Actually Counts Against Your 15GB?

This is the part that surprises most people. Your 15GB is not just for Drive files. It is a shared quota split across:

  • Google Drive – documents, spreadsheets, PDFs, videos, and any files you have uploaded or synced
  • Gmail – every email with an attachment, including old promotional emails with embedded images
  • Google Photos – photos and videos backed up from your phone, especially full-resolution ones

According to Google’s own storage breakdown, Photos tends to be the biggest culprit for most users. Google ended its unlimited free storage policy for Photos in June 2021. Since then, every new photo or video you back up counts against your quota.

For example, a typical active Google user’s storage often looks something like this: Google Photos consuming around 54% of total space, Gmail around 24%, and Drive files making up most of the rest, with a surprising chunk going to forgotten trash and duplicate files.

If you have never consciously managed your storage in Google Drive, there is a reasonable chance you are sitting at 80 to 90% capacity right now without realizing it.

Beyond the three-service split, there are some specific habits and settings that speed things up even further.

  • Full-resolution photo and video backups.

Modern smartphone cameras shoot in high resolution. A single 4K video can easily run 300 to 500MB. If you have had auto-backup enabled for a few years and never switched to the compressed “Storage Saver” option in Google Photos, you have been quietly uploading gigabytes of footage you have probably never watched back.

  • Years of Gmail attachments.

Receipts, invoices, project files, and presentations that people shared with you five years ago are still sitting in your inbox. Research from email analytics firms suggests the average professional receives over 120 emails per day, many with attachments. Over five years, that adds up to a significant chunk of storage you may not even associate with Gmail.

  • Three trash bins that do not empty themselves.

Google Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos each have their own trash folder. Files you delete sit there for 30 days and still count against your storage the entire time. If you have never manually emptied them, you could be carrying gigabytes of files you thought you had already cleared.

  • Large files you uploaded and forgot about.

Old project files, video exports, ZIP archives from years back. They accumulate in the background, and because Drive does not surface them unless you go looking, they go unnoticed for months.

  • Duplicate files across shared drives and folders.

If you work with others or move files between devices and services, duplicates pile up. The same document saved in three places, the same photo backed up from two devices. Each copy eats its own share of your quota.

WhatsApp backups. This one catches a lot of people off guard. WhatsApp backups now count toward your 15GB Google storage limit. And within those backups, videos are usually the biggest drain, often making up around 80% of the total backup size.

Why Your Storage Bar Does Not Move After Deleting Files

Before jumping into the cleanup steps, it is worth understanding why your Google Drive storage can still look full even after you have deleted a lot. This is one of the most frustrating parts of the whole experience, and most guides do not explain it properly.

1. The Sync Delay Is Real

Google’s storage quota does not update in real time. After a large deletion, it can take 48 to 72 hours for the storage bar to reflect the change. In cases where you have deleted thousands of files at once, it can take longer.

So if you have just done a big cleanup and nothing looks different yet, wait a couple of days before assuming it did not work.

A quick way to check: open your storage on the mobile app and compare it to what the browser shows. If the numbers are different, that is a confirmed server sync delay, not a real problem.

You can also try signing out of your Google account and signing back in. This forces a fresh authentication and often speeds up the recalculation.

2. You Might Be Deleting the Wrong Photos

Any photo uploaded to Google Photos before June 1, 2021, in “High Quality” mode was stored for free and never counted toward your 15GB. If you delete those photos now, you reclaim zero bytes. The storage bar will not move at all.

To make sure you are deleting files that actually count, visit *photos.google.com/quotamanagement*. This tool shows you only the photos and videos that are currently using your quota, so you are not wasting time on files that were never being charged against you.

3. Files in Trash Still Count

Deleting a file just moves it to the trash. It stays there for up to 30 days and counts against your storage the entire time. To actually reclaim space, you need to empty the trash manually, and there are three separate ones to check: Google Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos.

How to Fix Google Drive Storage: The Full Cleanup Process

How to fix google drive storage

Here is a systematic approach you can work through step by step. If you do it in order, most people can get through the whole thing in under 30 minutes.

Step 1: Run Google’s Storage Manager First

Go to one.google.com/storage. This is Google’s official storage dashboard and it automatically surfaces large files, items in trash, and things it considers safe to delete.

Start here before doing anything else. It gives you the clearest picture of where your space is actually going and breaks it down across Drive, Gmail, and Photos all at once.

You can also go directly to drive.google.com/drive/quota to see your Drive files sorted by size, largest at the top.

Step 2: Delete Large Files First

Rather than spending an hour deleting hundreds of small files, focus on the big ones. Deleting five large files can free up more space than deleting five thousand small ones.

From the quota page, work your way down from the top. Large videos, old project archives, ZIP files, and meeting recordings saved to Drive are usually the best targets. If you have large files you want to keep but do not actively use, consider moving them rather than deleting them. You can find practical options for how to store large files online without keeping them in your primary Drive.

Step 3: Switch Google Photos to Storage Saver Mode

In Google Photos, go to Settings and switch your backup quality from “Original quality” to “Storage Saver.” Google’s compressed format is visually indistinguishable from the original for most purposes, and it significantly reduces the space that new uploads consume going forward. This will not recover existing space, but it will stop the problem from building back up as quickly.

Step 4: Empty All Three Trash Bins

Do this one at a time:

  • Google Drive: Go to drive.google.com, click Trash in the left sidebar, then click Empty Trash
  • Google Photos: Go to photos.google.com, click Trash, then click Empty Trash
  • Gmail: Go to Spam and Trash folders separately and empty both

This step alone often recovers 1 to 2GB instantly, sometimes more if you have been leaving things in the trash for a while.

Step 5: Clear Up Storage on Google Drive With the Gmail Cleanup

In Gmail’s search bar, type:

has:attachment larger:5MB

This surfaces every thread with large attachments. Sort by size and start deleting the ones you no longer need, like project files from old jobs, large presentations, and outdated documents people sent years ago.

You can also combine the search with a date filter to find old emails specifically:

has:attachment larger:5MB older_than:2y

This targets large files from more than two years ago, which are almost always safe to delete.

Step 6: Fix Your WhatsApp Backup

If you have WhatsApp backed up to Google, this is likely one of the bigger drains on your account. To reduce the backup size going forward:

  1. Open WhatsApp on your phone
  2. Go to Settings
  3. Tap Chats
  4. Tap Chat Backup
  5. Turn off “Include Videos”

Videos typically make up around 80% of a WhatsApp backup’s total size. Turning this off will make your future backups significantly smaller. You can also delete the existing large backup from Google Drive and let it create a fresh, smaller one on the next cycle.

Step 7: Clean Up Google Photos the Right Way

Visit photos.google.com/quotamanagement to see only the files that are counting against your storage. When deleting photos in bulk, use the web version of Google Photos rather than the mobile app. On the web, you can hold Shift and click to select hundreds of photos at once, which is much faster. After clearing out what you do not need, empty the Google Photos Trash to immediately reclaim the space.

Step 8: Find and Delete Orphaned Files

Orphaned files are files that exist in your Drive but are not inside any folder. This happens when someone adds your file to a shared folder and the folder owner later deletes the folder, but not the file itself. The file becomes invisible when you browse normally, but it still uses your storage.

To find these, type the following into the Google Drive search bar:

is:unorganized owner:me

This shows every file you own that is not inside a folder. Review what comes up and delete anything you no longer need.

Step 9: Do an Ownership Check Before Deleting

Here is something worth knowing before you spend time on a big cleanup. Deleting a file that someone else owns frees up zero space for you. Only files you own count toward your quota.

Before starting any major deletion, search:

owner:me

This shows only the files you actually own and are being charged for. It is a much more reliable starting point than just browsing through shared folders.

Step 10: Clear Hidden App Data

Third-party apps connected to your Google Drive often store data in a hidden area you cannot see by browsing your folders normally. Backup tools, WhatsApp, and other utilities can store logs and files there that quietly use gigabytes of your storage.

To find and delete this hidden data:

  1. Go to drive.google.com
  2. Click the Settings gear icon in the top right
  3. Select Settings
  4. Click Manage Apps
  5. For each app, click Options and select Delete hidden app data

This is one of those steps people rarely try but often produces a noticeable space recovery.

Step 11: Convert Office Files to Google’s Native Formats

Files created natively in Google Docs, Sheets, or Slides do not count toward your storage. But Microsoft Word, Excel, or PowerPoint files saved in your Drive do.

If you have a lot of Office files sitting in Drive, converting them to Google’s native formats can save you several gigabytes. Right-click any file, select Open with, choose the appropriate Google app, then go to File and save it as a Google Doc, Sheet, or Slide. Once converted, you can delete the original Office file.

Step 12: Move Archive Files to a Different Service

For files you want to keep but do not actively use, moving them off Google Drive entirely is often the cleanest solution. Old project archives, video exports, and backups that you want to hold onto but rarely open are good candidates for this.

Moving them to a secondary cloud service frees up your Google quota without losing the files. If you are not sure which service to move things to, this guide on how to get more free cloud storage covers the best options available right now.

What to Do If the Storage Bar Still Does Not Move

You have deleted files, emptied the trash, and done everything right, but your storage still shows as full. Here is what to try.

  • Check in an incognito window.

Open a private browsing window and check your storage at one.google.com/storage. If the number looks lower in incognito than in your regular browser, your browser cache is showing outdated information. The cleanup has already worked. The regular browser just has not caught up yet.

  • Sign out and sign back in.

This forces a fresh authentication token and often triggers the storage total to update faster than waiting it out.

  • If you use Drive for Desktop:

Restart the app. The local cache can sometimes prevent the cloud from showing the correct storage status. If it stays stuck, try disconnecting your account in Drive for Desktop and reconnecting. This resets the sync entirely and forces a fresh handshake with the server.

  • Wait.

If you deleted a very large amount of data, the safest thing is to give it 48 to 72 hours before assuming something is wrong.

The Long-Term Fix: Stop Running Out of Google Storage Repeatedly

Going through the cleanup steps above will solve the immediate problem. But if you are regularly hitting the Google Drive storage full wall, the real issue is usually that you have no clear system for where things live or how much space you are actually using.

A few habits that help keep things under control:

  • Sort by size every few months.

Visit drive.google.com/drive/quota regularly and move or delete anything large that you are no longer actively using. This one habit alone prevents most storage emergencies.

  • Keep your folders organized.

When your files are scattered everywhere, cleanup takes three times as long because you cannot tell what is important and what is not. A clear folder structure makes it easy to spot what can go. This guide on how to organize Google Drive is a good place to build that system.

  • Do not store files you only need to share.

If you are uploading something just to send it to someone, you do not need to keep it in Drive permanently afterward. There are better ways to share files via cloud storage without holding onto them long-term.

  • Empty your trash monthly.

Set a reminder to empty your Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos trash folders once a month. Files sitting in trash for 30 days are still using your storage every single day.

Managing Multiple Cloud Accounts Without the Chaos

The five steps above will clear your immediate storage problem. But if you are regularly juggling Google Drive, Dropbox, and OneDrive, logging in and out of each, manually hunting for files, and losing track of what is where, you will keep hitting this storage full wall more often than you want to.

You clear out one service, something else fills up, and you end up running on a hamster wheel.

This is where having a way to manage your storage in Google Drive and your other cloud accounts together makes a real difference. Instead of treating Google’s 15GB as your entire storage budget, you can spread your files across the combined free storage of multiple services and actually keep track of all of it from one place.

All Cloud Hub is built for exactly this. It is a unified cloud storage management platform that connects Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive, pCloud, and Google Photos into a single dashboard. Instead of opening multiple tabs and switching between accounts, you can:

  • See exactly which files are shared, where they live, and whether you have duplicates sitting in multiple services, something that is genuinely impossible to track when you are managing three clouds separately
  • Move files from an overloaded Google Drive directly to Dropbox or OneDrive without downloading anything to your device first. Direct cloud-to-cloud transfer
  • Sync folders automatically across services, so if one drive fills up, files can move to wherever there is space
  • Search across all connected drives at once from a single search bar

On the privacy side, files never pass through All Cloud Hub’s servers. Authentication uses OAuth 2.0, meaning you connect your accounts without sharing passwords, and you can revoke access at any time.

If part of your storage problem is that you have ran out of Google storage repeatedly and need a better overall system, being able to manage multiple cloud storage accounts from one place changes the dynamic entirely. You can also migrate files from Google Drive to another service directly without the usual download and re-upload process.

All Cloud Hub is free to get started. Connect your drives, see everything in one place, and stop fighting storage limits one service at a time.

Wrapping Up

Here is the quiet truth about this problem. You will go through all these steps, free up 5 or 6GB tonight, and completely forget this blog exists. Then three months from now you will get that exact same red warning again.

That is not because you are messy. That is how Google designed this.

Almost no one tells you that most of the time when your Google Drive storage is full, it is not your fault. It is hidden app data, WhatsApp backups, files sitting in three separate trash bins. None of it is stuff you would ever find browsing your folders normally.

You can work through this checklist once and you will get your space back. That part is easy.

The hard part is not doing this all over again in 90 days.

If you only ever use Google Drive, that is fine. But if you are like most people and you also have files in Dropbox, OneDrive and a few other places too, stop managing them all separately. That is the real problem.

All Cloud Hub was built for exactly that. Not to sell you more storage. Just to stop you from having this same stupid fight every three months.

One last thing. If you do nothing else after reading this: go empty all three trash bins tonight. That one step alone will fix this problem for 90% of you reading this right now.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. Why is my Google Drive storage still full after I deleted files?

This is one of the most common frustrations when you are trying to clear up storage on google drive. Deleted files move to a trash folder and still count against your quota for 30 days, so you need to manually empty the trash in Google Drive, Gmail, and Google Photos. Google can also take 48 to 72 hours to update your storage bar after a large cleanup. And if you deleted photos that were uploaded before June 2021 in High Quality, those never counted toward your 15GB limit in the first place, so removing them frees up zero space.

2. How can I free up Google Drive storage without losing important files?

You do not have to delete everything to make room. Convert Microsoft Office files to Google Docs, Sheets, or Slides, since native Google files do not count toward your limit. For large archives and old videos you want to keep but rarely open, move them to another cloud service instead of letting them sit in Drive. All Cloud Hub lets you transfer files directly from Google Drive to Dropbox, OneDrive, or pCloud without downloading them to your computer first, so your files stay safe while your Google space opens up.

3. What are orphaned files and how do I find them?

Orphaned files are items you own that were left behind when a shared folder got deleted. They still use your storage but do not appear in any folder when you browse normally. To find them, type is:unorganized owner:me into the Google Drive search bar. Review the results and delete anything you no longer need.

4. Do WhatsApp backups count toward my Google storage limit?

Yes. WhatsApp backups now count toward your 15GB limit, and videos usually make up about 80% of the backup size. To stop this from eating your space, open WhatsApp, go to Settings, then Chats, then Chat Backup, and turn off Include Videos. You can also delete the existing large backup from Google Drive and let it create a smaller one the next time it runs.

5. What is the easiest way to manage storage across multiple cloud accounts?

Checking Google Drive, Dropbox, and OneDrive separately to see what is using space is tedious and easy to neglect. All Cloud Hub brings all of those accounts into one dashboard where you can see everything together, search across every connected drive at once, and move files between services directly. It gives you a single view of your storage so you are not stuck logging into each account just to figure out where your space went.