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Google Drive Review: Pros, Cons, Features and Pricing Explained

Google Drive is a file sharing software that helps your team store, access, and collaborate on digital files from anywhere. If you’re juggling shifting requirements or chasing down version control across email threads, picking the right file sharing software can make or break your project efficiency. Google Drive stands out for its real-time collaboration, straightforward sharing controls, and tight integration across the entire Google ecosystem.

In this review, I’ll break down Google Drive’s key features, ideal use cases, pricing, pros, and cons to help you decide if it matches your team’s daily needs.

Google Drive Evaluation Summary

Google Drive simplifies file storage, sharing, and team collaboration.
Rating
4.6 /5
Pricing
  • From $6.30/month (billed annually)
  • 14-day free trial and free tier available

Why You Can Trust Us

Google Drive Overview

I think Google Drive offers unmatched accessibility and seamless integration, especially for teams already using Google Workspace. Pricing stays reasonable as storage grows, and onboarding’s about as easy as it gets. Interface clarity stands out, but large teams needing granular admin control or premium support might find it lacking. If you’re choosing for fast-moving remote teams or cross-company collaboration—think shared drives, real-time commenting, lightweight doc co-editing—Google Drive comes out on top. For those judging by ease of use and breadth of integrations, it’s hard to beat.

Our Review Methodology

How We Test & Score Tools

We’ve spent years building, refining, and improving our software testing and scoring system. The rubric is designed to capture the nuances of software selection and what makes a tool effective, focusing on critical aspects of the decision-making process.

Below, you can see exactly how our testing and scoring works across seven criteria. It allows us to provide an unbiased evaluation of the software based on core functionality, standout features, ease of use, onboarding, customer support, integrations, customer reviews, and value for money.

Core Functionality (25% of final scoring)

The starting point of our evaluation is always the core functionality of the tool. Does it have the basic features and functions that a user would expect to see? Are any of those core features locked to higher-tiered pricing plans? At its core, we expect a tool to stand up against the baseline capabilities of its competitors.

Standout Features (25% of final scoring)

Next, we evaluate uncommon standout features that go above and beyond the core functionality typically found in tools of its kind. A high score reflects specialized or unique features that make the product faster, more efficient, or offer additional value to the user.

We also evaluate how easy it is to integrate with other tools typically found in the tech stack to expand the functionality and utility of the software. Tools offering plentiful native integrations, 3rd party connections, and API access to build custom integrations score best.

Ease of Use (10% of final scoring)

We consider how quick and easy it is to execute the tasks defined in the core functionality using the tool. High scoring software is well designed, intuitive to use, offers mobile apps, provides templates, and makes relatively complex tasks seem simple.

Onboarding (10% of final scoring)

We know how important rapid team adoption is for a new platform, so we evaluate how easy it is to learn and use a tool with minimal training. We evaluate how quickly a team member can get set up and start using the tool with no experience. High scoring solutions indicate little or no support is required.

Customer Support (10% of final scoring)

We review how quick and easy it is to get unstuck and find help by phone, live chat, or knowledge base. Tools and companies that provide real-time support score best, while chatbots score worst.

Customer Reviews (10% of final scoring)

Beyond our own testing and evaluation, we consider the net promoter score from current and past customers. We review their likelihood, given the option, to choose the tool again for the core functionality. A high scoring software reflects a high net promoter score from current or past customers.

Value for Money (10% of final scoring)

Lastly, in consideration of all the other criteria, we review the average price of entry level plans against the core features and consider the value of the other evaluation criteria. Software that delivers more, for less, will score higher.

Core Features

Real-Time Document Collaboration

Work with teammates on the same file at once and see comments and edits live. This keeps everyone aligned without sending new file versions back and forth.

Version History and Restore

Track changes, review previous versions, and restore a file to an earlier state if needed. This feature helps you undo mistakes and audit team activity.

Cloud Storage and Backup

Upload files and folders to Google Drive for reliable cloud-based access. Your documents stay secure and retrievable from any device.

Link Sharing with Expiration Controls

Share files via custom links and set link expiration dates or restrict downloads. You stay in control of sensitive project documents at all times.

Offline File Access

Mark files for offline access to view and edit without an internet connection. Changes sync automatically the next time you’re online.

Ease of Use

Google Drive nails user-friendliness with its simple drag-and-drop uploads, clear permission settings, and real-time editing. Teams say onboarding feels almost frictionless—most users need little to no training to get started. The built-in search, comments, and logical folder structure make managing and finding files fast, even for larger organizations.

Integrations

Google Drive integrates with Google Docs, Google Sheets, Google Slides, Gmail, Google Meet, Google Calendar, Google Forms, Google Sites, Google Chat, and Google Classroom, among others.

It also offers an API to use for custom app workflows and connections with third-party integration tools.

Google Drive Specs

  • 2-Factor Authentication
  • API
  • Chat
  • Dashboard
  • Data Export
  • Data Import
  • Document Comparison
  • External Integrations
  • File Sharing
  • File Transfer
  • History/Version Control
  • Multi-User
  • Network Traffic Monitoring
  • Notifications
  • Project Management

Google Drive FAQs

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By Galen Low

I've spent 15+ years solving the human side of digital project management. I'm Co-Founder of The Digital Project Manager and host of its weekly podcast, where I explore AI's impact on our field with industry experts. Previously, I held VP and Director-level roles at boutique digital agencies across Canada. I'm PMP®-certified since 2013, have spoken at PMI and Agile Alliance, and am recognized among Canada's top project managers.