ToolsRanks

Dropbox vs Microsoft OneDrive: which should you choose?

Quick answer: Dropbox is built for file-sync, while Microsoft OneDrive suits microsoft-365-users. For most users Dropbox is the stronger default, but Microsoft OneDrive can be the better fit depending on your budget and use case.

Both Dropbox and Microsoft OneDrive get recommended a lot, but they solve the job differently. Below we compare them on pricing, strengths and the use cases each one fits, then give a clear verdict.

Side-by-side

DropboxMicrosoft OneDrive
CategoryCloud StorageCloud Storage
What it's known forBest-in-class file sync reliability and the broadest third-party integration ecosystem, with strong collaboration features.Bundled with Microsoft 365, tight Windows and Office integration, and Personal Vault for sensitive files.
PricingFree 2GB; ~$11.99/mo Plus 2TB, ~$19.99/mo Essentials 3TB; Business tiers higherFree 5GB; ~$1.99/mo 100GB; 1TB included with Microsoft 365 Personal (~$69.99/yr); Business ~$5/user/mo
Best audienceUsers and teams who prioritize seamless sync and integration with many third-party apps over maximum privacy.Windows and Microsoft 365 users who want storage tightly integrated with Office.
Best forfile-sync, integrationsmicrosoft-365-users, windows
Entry priceFreeFree
Biggest strengthExtremely reliable, fast sync with mature desktop clients.Excellent value when bundled with Microsoft 365 (1TB + Office apps).
Main caveatNo zero-knowledge encryption; Dropbox holds the keys.No zero-knowledge encryption; Microsoft holds the keys.
More on Dropbox →More on Microsoft OneDrive →

Features compared

Beyond the spec sheet, these are the capabilities that define each tool:

Dropbox key features

  • Best-in-class file sync with block-level (delta) sync for fast updates
  • Broadest third-party integration ecosystem of any consumer cloud
  • 30-day (Plus) to 180-day (higher tiers) file recovery and version history
  • Dropbox Transfer for large file delivery (up to 100GB on higher plans)

Microsoft OneDrive key features

  • Tight Windows and Office integration; built into File Explorer
  • 1TB included with each Microsoft 365 Personal/Family seat
  • Personal Vault folder with multi-factor authentication for sensitive files
  • Files On-Demand to access cloud files without using local disk

Pricing tiers side by side

Dropbox plans

PlanPriceWhat's included
Free (Basic)02GB, up to 3 linked devices, 30-day history
Plus 2TB~$11.99/mo (~$119.88/yr)individual
Essentials 3TB~$19.99/mofreelancers/solo pro (formerly Professional)
Businesshigher per-userteam admin, more storage

Microsoft OneDrive plans

PlanPriceWhat's included
Free05GB; Personal Vault limited to 3 files
OneDrive 100GB~$1.99/mostorage only
Microsoft 365 Personal~$6.99/mo or ~$69.99/yr1TB + Office apps, 1 user
Microsoft 365 Family~$9.99/mo or ~$99.99/yr1TB per user, up to 6 users

Tiers compiled from the vendors' published plans and independent reviews; prices are approximate and change often, so confirm current figures (and your region's taxes) on each vendor's site.

Strengths compared

Where Dropbox wins

The benchmark for reliable file sync and the deepest third-party app integration ecosystem.

That makes it the stronger pick for users and teams who prioritize seamless sync and integration with many third-party apps over maximum privacy.

Where Microsoft OneDrive wins

The default cloud for Windows/Office users, with 1TB bundled into Microsoft 365.

That makes it the stronger pick for windows and Microsoft 365 users who want storage tightly integrated with Office.

Verdict: choose by fit

There is no single winner; it depends on where you sit.

FAQ

Is Dropbox better than Microsoft OneDrive?

Dropbox is the stronger default for most users, but Microsoft OneDrive can be the better fit depending on your budget and use case.

What is the main difference between Dropbox and Microsoft OneDrive?

Dropbox is the benchmark for reliable file sync and the deepest third-party app integration ecosystem. Microsoft OneDrive is the default cloud for Windows/Office users, with 1TB bundled into Microsoft 365.

Which is cheaper, Dropbox or Microsoft OneDrive?

Both Dropbox and Microsoft OneDrive offer a free tier, so the real comparison is the paid plans above — pick based on the storage, features and limits you actually need.

Sources

Facts above are drawn from these independent reviews and the vendors' own pages for Dropbox and Microsoft OneDrive: