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Without unlimited original quality photo backups, a 64GB Pixel 4 is ridiculous
July 13, 2025
TheGoogle Pixel 4 and Pixel 4 XLjust landed. These are the flagship phones from Google in 2019 — well, at least when compared to the only other Google phones from this year, the mid-rangeGoogle Pixel 3aandPixel 3a XL.
Despite the fact that we consider main line Pixel devices to be flagship phones, they usually don’t compare if youhold them up against contemporary flagshipsfrom other manufacturers in terms of specs. TheGoogle Pixel 3from 2018, for example, had a single rear camera while other devices launched that year had two or even three.
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Pixel devices usually have less battery capacity than other flagships, too, and less RAM. In fact, most every spec you look at it in a Pixel device is probably not even close to “top of the line.”
One spec has been literally the same ever since theGoogle Pixel 2landed in 2017: your choice between 64GB or 128GB of internal storage. In 2017, a 64GB storage limit was pretty good, with most other flagships matching it. But Google kept the same options in 2018 for the Google Pixel 3, and now it’s continuing the trend with theGoogle Pixel 4.
Related:Google Pixel 4 and Pixel 4 XL specs: Flagship features, but no powerhouse
Meanwhile, theSamsung Galaxy A50— a 2019 phone that costs $350, or less than half of a Pixel 4 — comes with 64GB of storage. That device even has a microSD slot so you can add more if you need it, something the Pixel 4 lacks.
Even when the Pixel 3 launched with a 64GB starting option, there werea lot of negative comments in response. However, Google had an ace up its sleeve to help explain this: unlimited original quality Google Photos backups of every photo and video captured with the device.
Photos and videos are usually what take up the most space on the average smartphone, so Google’s decision to limit internal storage makes a degree of sense if this perk is included. If you can back up all your media to the cloud and not lose out on quality at all, you can just delete media from your internal storage and keep snapping away. Brilliant!
We learned not long after the launch of the Pixel 4 thatGoogle is doing away with this perk. If you buy a Pixel 4, your photos and videos will still backup toGoogle Photos, but only at “high quality,” which is a compressed format. Literally every single smartphone in the world can do this for free, whether you paid $100 for it or $1,000, so this isn’t even a perk anymore.
Without unlimited original quality backups, the 64GB Google Pixel 4 —which costs $800— is a joke. With the state-of-the-art computational photography of the Pixel line being the biggest selling point of the phone, half the reason people are buying the thing is to take photos. A shutterbug will easily fill that 64GB and then need to choose between one of three unattractive options:
Obviously, that third option is what Google is hoping you’ll do. That’s why the Google Pixel 4 comes with a free three-month trial ofGoogle One, a cloud storage service specifically designed for just that function.
It’s hard not to feel like Google is pulling a bit of a bait-and-switch here. The original Google Pixel came with unlimited original quality backups for life. The Pixel 2 and Pixel 3 have unlimited original quality backups, but with a time limit: August 12, 2025, and June 19, 2025, respectively. The Pixel 3a didn’t have the feature, but that made sense since the device starts at just $400. But now the Pixel 4 doesn’t have the feature — and it costs twice as much.
Related:Google Pixel 4 and Pixel 4 XL vs the competition
Google’s thought process for this is probably this: most Pixel 4 buyers will be fine with the “high quality” backups afforded by Google Photos for free, a few will be unhappy but pay for Google One backups, and a small minority will be upset enough to not buy the phone. If that ends up being true, then Google is likely OK with that.
For me though, I’m gravitating away from buying the Google Pixel 4 simply on principle.Why pay $800 for a phonewhen I can get better specs from cheaper devices from other OEMs? Why pay a premium forthat fancy Pixel camera systemif my photos and videos will be trapped in a tiny, non-expandable hard drive? Does Google honestly thinkMotion Senseis enough for people to buy a Pixel 4 over a Pixel 3a for half the price?
If anything, I’ll justbuy a heavily-discounted Google Pixel 3and take advantage of those free original quality photo backups for the next two years.
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