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Why we charge $2.99/mo when others charge $11.99

200 GB of cloud storage at iCloud or Dropbox runs you $11.99 a month. We do it for $2.99. Here's the honest breakdown of where that gap comes from.

April 3, 2026 5 min read

Our Lite plan is $2.99/month for 200 GB. The same storage tier from iCloud costs $2.99 (200 GB), from Dropbox costs $11.99 (2 TB Plus — there is no 200 GB tier), from Google One costs $2.99 (200 GB). So we're roughly at parity with the big platforms at the small tier.

Where the gap really shows up is the Pro tier: 2 TB for $9.99/month, vs Dropbox at $11.99 or Microsoft 365 at $9.99 (but bundling Office, which is the whole product). And Pro Max — 5 TB for $19.99 — has no direct competitor at the price point.

So how? We're not magic. Three structural choices.

1. There's no ad layer

We don't run advertising. We don't sell your data. We don't have an analytics team mining usage to "improve targeting." Every dollar of revenue funds storage, infrastructure, and a small product team. The economics of pure subscription are simpler than the economics of subscription plus ad infrastructure.

2. We're a small operation by design

Big cloud providers carry overhead that's load-bearing for them and irrelevant for you: enterprise sales teams, support tiers, compliance theater. We have a small team in Florida. The product is the product and the team that builds it answers support emails.

That has tradeoffs — we don't have a SOC 2 Type II report yet, we don't have a 24/7 phone support line. If your business needs those, our competitors are doing them well. If you just want secure cloud storage that doesn't try to upsell you on AI assistants and document workflows, we're a better fit.

3. Smart storage routing

Our backend routes a user's storage across multiple S3-compatible backends depending on access patterns and cost. Cold files land on cheap-egress storage; hot files stay on low-latency storage. The end user never notices — files are uniformly addressable — but the per-GB cost we pay is roughly half what we'd pay on a single provider.

A note on iOS pricing

Apple takes a 30% (or 15% after year one) cut of every subscription sold through the App Store. So if you subscribe via the iOS app, prices are higher — typically $0.30 to $4 more depending on tier. We pass that through transparently rather than absorb it.

To get the lowest price, subscribe at virtualdrive.us rather than inside the iOS app. The account is the same either way.

The bottom line

We're not undercutting competitors by skimping on infrastructure. We're undercutting them by skipping the parts of their business that exist to sustain billion-dollar valuations. That's a tradeoff we're happy to make — and one we hope appeals to the people we're trying to serve.