Good Internet Speed for Cloud Storage in 2025 — Google Drive, OneDrive, and iCloud
Cloud storage sync speed is primarily an upload concern — and upload speed is the most constrained metric on most internet plans. Test your upload at instantspeedtest.net/.
Cloud Storage Sync Times — By Upload Speed and File Size
| File Size | 5 Mbps Upload | 20 Mbps Upload | 100 Mbps Upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 GB document folder | 27 min | 7 min | 1.4 min |
| 10 GB photo library | 4.4 hrs | 66 min | 13 min |
| 100 GB photo library | 44 hrs | 11 hrs | 2.2 hrs |
| 500 GB media files | 9 days | 55 hrs | 11 hrs |
| 1 TB full backup | 18 days | 4.6 days | 22 hrs |
Cloud Storage Platform Comparison — Upload Speed Limits
All major cloud storage platforms (Google Drive, OneDrive, iCloud, Dropbox) can accept uploads at your full internet upload speed. The difference is in how they manage uploads: iCloud Photos uses intelligent compression and prioritizes recent photos; Google Photos with smart upload scheduling; Dropbox with LAN sync that shares files between devices on the same network without uploading. For the first-time setup of cloud storage with a large existing library (100 GB+), the upload is the primary time investment. Schedule the initial upload to run overnight or over a weekend — incremental daily sync afterward is typically under 100 MB/day for most users and completes in minutes. See our guide on Dropbox cloud sync.
Related Guides
- Speed for Dropbox Cloud Sync
- Good Upload Speed
- Improve Upload Speed
- Speed for Online Backup
- Fiber vs Cable Internet
- Cloud Video Editing Speed
Frequently Asked Questions
Does cloud storage slow down internet when syncing?
Cloud sync clients consume upload bandwidth proportional to file change volume. For document workers making small daily changes: impact is under 1 Mbps — negligible. For photographers uploading new shoots: impact can be 5–20 Mbps sustained during the upload. Most sync clients have bandwidth throttling: Dropbox → Settings → Bandwidth; OneDrive → Settings → Performance → Sync speed. Set a limit during working hours to prevent sync from competing with video calls. See our Dropbox bandwidth guide.
Is 50 Mbps enough upload for Google Photos with a large library?
Yes — 50 Mbps upload syncs 10 GB in approximately 27 minutes. For an initial 100 GB library upload: approximately 4.4 hours at 50 Mbps. For daily incremental uploads of new photos (50–200 MB/day): under 2 minutes at 50 Mbps. The initial library upload is the significant event; ongoing sync is trivial at any broadband speed. Fiber’s 100–500 Mbps upload makes even large initial uploads manageable within a few hours.