Google just Slashed Gmail's Free Storage to One-Third - Here's What You Need to Know

May 25, 2026 · Written by Raghu Kumar

If you're planning to sign up for a new Gmail account, you're in for a surprise. Google has quietly begun testing a policy that caps new accounts at just 5GB of free storage - a significant drop from the 15GB users have enjoyed for years.

The change first surfaced on Reddit on May 13, 2026, when a user posted a screenshot of a freshly created Gmail account showing the reduced limit, accompanied by an offer to "unlock" more storage - by adding a verified phone number. Dozens of other users quickly chimed in with identical experiences.


Gmail free storage

What Google is actually saying

Google confirmed the test to Android Authority on May 15, 2026. In their own words:

"We're testing a new storage policy for new accounts… while encouraging users to improve their account security and data recovery." - Google spokesperson

In plain English: hand us your phone number and we'll give you the 15GB you were expecting. The verified phone number also serves as a de-facto one-per-person check, making it harder to spin up throwaway Gmail accounts.


The quiet documentation change in March

Interestingly, people noticed that there was a change in Google's documentation back in March 2026. The Wayback Machine reveals that as far back as March 18, 2026 - a full two months before anyone noticed in-app - Google changed the language on its Google One support page from "Your Google Account comes with 15 GB of cloud storage at no charge" to the watered-down "up to 15 GB of cloud storage at no charge." Two little words, one massive implication.


Google documentation change

The privacy elephant in the room

This is where things get a bit uncomfortable. Tying storage to a phone number means Google can now link your Gmail activity to a real-world identity - with all the tracking and profiling implications that come with it. Your phone number can be used for targeted advertising, cross-platform identification, and is a potential vector for SIM-swap attacks (which could result in your Gmail account being compromised).

For users in regions with limited digital rights protections, or those who rely on Gmail for sensitive communications, this is a huge trade-off - not just a minor inconvenience.

To be fair, some observers see this as a reasonable move - unlimited throwaway accounts have long been abused for spam, and tying storage to a verified identity is standard practice at many other platforms.


Who is affected?

Right now, the change only applies to new accounts in undisclosed "select regions" (The Reddit user who first reported this change is from the African region). Existing accounts remain unaffected - for now. But the careful change in documentation language, combined with the rollout of an in-app prompt, strongly suggests this could go much wider. Historically, Google uses regional tests to iron out friction before a global launch.

Here's the kicker: Existing accounts without a linked mobile number could also be at risk — Google may eventually apply the same storage cap to them. Nothing in the current rollout rules this out.


5GB fills up faster than you think

Five gigabytes sounds fine until you realize it's shared across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos combined. A few months of email attachments, some scanned documents, and a handful of photos from your phone backup and you're already pushing the limit. For anyone who's ever received a PDF-heavy chain of work emails, 5GB can evaporate in a matter of weeks.

Which brings us to the real lesson here: inbox hygiene matters more than ever.


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What should you do right now?

If you have an existing account, there's no immediate action required - your 15GB is safe. But it's worth treating this as a nudge to audit your inbox. Delete old email threads with large attachments (check out my blog post on finding and deleting large emails and how Clear Mail can help), empty your trash and spam folders, and consider regularly deleting files you no longer need in Google Drive.

For anyone signing up for a new account in the coming months, be prepared to make a choice: share your phone number for the full 15GB, or manage your digital life within a much tighter 5GB budget. Either way, building good inbox habits now will save you headaches later.

5GB is the new normal until you verify. Do you think that's a fair trade?




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