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Home > Mobile & Wearables > Phones > Google’s free Gmail storage test: 5GB initial, 15GB with a phone number
Mobile & WearablesPhones

Google’s free Gmail storage test: 5GB initial, 15GB with a phone number

Zaid Al-Mansouri
By
Zaid Al-Mansouri
ByZaid Al-Mansouri
Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers smartphones, wearables, and mobile technology.
Last updated: 16/05/2026
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Google's free Gmail storage test: 5GB initial, 15GB with a phone number
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Google free Gmail storage is not disappearing—but the way new users access it is changing. Instead of handing out the full 15GB to every fresh account, Google is testing a 5GB initial limit that expands to 15GB once you add a phone number during account setup. The move is not a policy reversal; it is a conditional unlock tied to account security and phone verification.

Key Takeaways

  • Google is testing a 5GB initial storage limit for some new Gmail accounts, not eliminating 15GB free storage.
  • The full 15GB unlocks automatically when you add a phone number to your account.
  • The 15GB limit applies to the combined storage pool across Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos.
  • This appears to be a test affecting new account creation, not a change to existing accounts.
  • Phone-number verification is already part of Google’s sign-up flow; this test adds a storage incentive.

What Google is actually testing with Gmail storage

The core claim circulating online is misleading: Google is not killing its long-standing 15GB free storage offer. Instead, the company is experimenting with a tiered unlock mechanism. New accounts start with 5GB of usable space. To get the remaining 10GB—bringing the total to 15GB—users must provide a phone number during or shortly after sign-up. This is not mandatory to use Gmail; it is optional to claim the full allocation. The distinction matters because it reframes the change as a security incentive, not a storage cut.

The 15GB pool itself remains unchanged and covers all Google services: Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Photos combined. If you hit the 15GB ceiling, you cannot upload more content across any of these services until you delete files or pay for additional storage through Google One. The test appears focused on new account creation, not retroactively affecting existing users who already have full 15GB access.

Why Google is tying storage to phone verification

Google’s sign-up flow already requests a phone number in many cases. This test simply adds a tangible reward for providing one. Phone numbers serve two purposes: they strengthen account security by enabling two-factor authentication and they help Google verify that a real person—not a bot or spam account—is creating the account. By conditioning the full 15GB on phone entry, Google incentivizes users to complete a security step that protects them anyway. It is a carrot-and-stick approach wrapped as a feature unlock.

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The timing of this test reflects broader industry trends toward account verification. Email-only sign-ups are increasingly rare; most major platforms now request phone numbers or secondary authentication. Google’s approach is gentler than some competitors—you still get 5GB without a phone number, which is enough for basic email use. The full 15GB simply requires a few extra seconds to add your number.

What this means for existing Gmail users

If you already have a Gmail account with 15GB of free storage, this test does not affect you. The change targets new accounts created going forward, not the millions of existing users who signed up before this test began. Google has not announced a blanket policy change or a date when the 5GB default would roll out globally. The article’s characterization as a test—not a permanent shift—is important: Google may refine, expand, or abandon this approach based on user feedback and adoption rates.

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For users who are concerned about hitting storage limits, the shared 15GB pool across Gmail, Drive, and Photos means you need to manage all three services together. Deleting old emails, clearing out Google Photos backups, or archiving Drive files all contribute to freeing up space within the same quota. If you regularly exceed 15GB, Google One subscriptions offer 100GB, 2TB, or larger tiers at monthly or annual rates.

How to unlock the full 15GB in the test

If you are creating a new Gmail account and encounter the 5GB initial limit, the unlock process is straightforward: add a phone number when prompted during sign-up, or visit your account security settings afterward and add one there. Google will verify the number via SMS or a call. Once verified, your storage limit should jump to 15GB within a few minutes. The process is reversible—you can remove the phone number later, though it is unclear whether storage would revert to 5GB or remain at 15GB after removal.

The test is not universal yet. Some new accounts see the 5GB limit; others get the full 15GB immediately. This rollout pattern is typical for Google’s A/B testing—the company runs changes on a subset of users to measure adoption, support load, and user satisfaction before deciding whether to expand or retire the test. If you create a new account and see the full 15GB without adding a phone number, you are likely in the control group.

Is Google ending free storage?

No. Google free Gmail storage remains at 15GB for consumer accounts. The company is not announcing a new paid-only model or shrinking the free tier across the board. This test simply changes the friction and incentive structure for new users—they start smaller but can instantly unlock the full amount with minimal effort. It is a nudge toward better account security, not a reduction in available storage.

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What happens if I don’t add a phone number?

You can continue using Gmail with 5GB of storage indefinitely. That is enough for years of typical email use, depending on attachment sizes and forwarding habits. You will not be locked out or forced to pay. If you eventually fill the 5GB limit, uploads will fail until you delete old emails, clear your Trash, or add a phone number to unlock the remaining 10GB.

Will this test expand to all Gmail users?

Google has not announced plans to roll this test globally or apply it to existing accounts. The company typically tests changes on a fraction of users before deciding on wider rollout. If the test shows positive results—higher phone-number adoption, improved account security, lower support tickets—Google may expand it. If adoption is poor or users complain, the test may end quietly. No timeline or expansion date has been announced.

The bottom line: Google free Gmail storage is not disappearing. The company is simply experimenting with a way to encourage new users to add phone numbers for security, with the full 15GB as the reward. If you are a new Gmail user and see 5GB initially, add your phone number to unlock the rest. If you already have a Gmail account, nothing changes. This is a test, not a policy reversal—and it reflects how Google balances free storage with account security.

Edited by the All Things Geek team.

Source: TechRadar

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ByZaid Al-Mansouri
Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers smartphones, wearables, and mobile technology.
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