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Accounts that exceed 2TB Cloud Storage

I'm about to exceed 2TB. Is there an option to add per 1TB to make it more affordable for personal accounts like mine?

iPhone 14 Pro Max

Posted on May 12, 2023 10:00 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on May 13, 2023 7:42 AM

Current iCloud limit is 4 TB, which requires an Apple One subscription and then adding an iCloud+ subscription.


Official details: What happens to your iCloud storage when you sign up for Apple One - Apple Support




And for completeness, here is how to: Archive or make copies of the information you store in iCloud - Apple Support


3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

May 13, 2023 7:42 AM in response to Techizee

Current iCloud limit is 4 TB, which requires an Apple One subscription and then adding an iCloud+ subscription.


Official details: What happens to your iCloud storage when you sign up for Apple One - Apple Support




And for completeness, here is how to: Archive or make copies of the information you store in iCloud - Apple Support


May 13, 2023 7:15 AM in response to Techizee

"On the cloud" is great for sharing photos, but is not a viable backup solution for everything you have. The stuff is not under your control, and is subject to sloppy handling, arbitrary changes in policy, accidental deletion, theft, data loss [are they making frequent backups using best practices?], and bankruptcy of the company that holds it. It can easily take three days to restore it at ordinary Internet speeds.


If you do not have a recent local, disk-based backup, your computer is like a ticking Time bomb. You are only one disk failure, one crazy software, or one "oops" away from losing EVERYTHING! Drives do not last forever. It is not a question of IF it will fail, only WHEN it will fail. In addition, you never know when crazy software or Pilot Error throws away far more than you intended.


If you are using another direct-to-disk backup method that you prefer, and you currently have a recent disk-based backup, that is great. If not, you should consider using Built-in Time Machine. Take steps to acquire an external drive as soon as possible. If you buy one, a drive 2 to 3 times or larger than your boot drive is preferable for long term trouble-free operation. Do not pay extra for a drive that is fast.  (You can get by for a while with a "found" smaller drive if necessary, but it will eventually become annoying).


Attach your external drive and use

System preferences > Time machine ...


... to turn on Time Machine and specify what drive to store your Backups on.  It may ask to initialize the new drive, and that is as expected.


Time machine works quietly and automatically in the background, without interrupting your regular work, and only saves the incremental changes (after the first full backup). Time machine backs up every connected drive that is in a Mac compatible format. it can not back up Windows format drives.


Time Machine's "claim to fame" is that it is the backup that gets done, because it does not ruin performance of the rest of the computer while doing its backup operations. You do not have to set aside a "Special Time" when you only do backups. When you need it, your Time machine Backup is much more likely to be there.


How to use Time Machine to Backup or Restore your Mac:

Back up your Mac with Time Machine - Apple Support



Accounts that exceed 2TB Cloud Storage

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