Apple Now Lets You Easily Transfer Images From iCloud to Google Photos

While Google Photos has been the subject of some scrutiny since it announced it would be removing its unlimited “High Quality” free storage option, it’s still a very popular service. Apple is making it easy to move from iCloud to Google Photos with a new free feature launched today.

To request a transfer of iCloud photos, you first need to sign in to privacy.apple.com with your Apple ID, then choose to transfer a copy of your data. Follow the prompts to complete the request, where you’ll be asked to sign in to your Google account to initiate the transfer. Once that’s done, you will get a confirmation email that the transfer has been requested and you’re done. You will receive a second email once the transfer has been completed.

“Your Google account’s total storage space applies to content transferred from iCloud Photos to Google Photos,” Apple specifies. “Google Photos also has a limit of 20,000 photos per album. If you transfer an album with more than 20,000 photos, the additional photos are still transferred but are not added to the album.”

Also note that whenever possible, photos are transferred with their albums, and only the most recent edit of a photo is transferred and not necessarily the original version. Videos are transferred separately outside of albums.

Apple says that you can request to transfer a copy of photos and videos that you store in iCloud Photos to Google photos at any time, and transferring those photos and videos does not remove them or alter the content you share with Apple, but instead is only sending a copy.

The transfer process can take between three and seven days, which Apple says is done to make sure that the request to do so is legitimate and not an attempt to access private information by a nefarious third party.

Apple describes the feature as the ability to transfer a copy of photos stored in iCloud to another service, but initially, that is only available for transfers to Google Photos. That does leave the door open for this feature to work with other services in the future though, so if you’re keen to jump off iCloud but don’t necessarily think Google Photos is the right place for you, there will likely be other options down the road.

(via Engadget)


Image credit: Background of header image by feshap / Depositphotos

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