Google has changed its Cloud Storage pricing. The new plan starts next month. It changes how customers pay for storing files. The goal is to make bills simpler. Costs will be more predictable. Many users will save money. The old pricing had complex rules. The new model uses tiers. Prices drop when storage grows. Big users get better rates. Google also combined operation fees. Reading and writing data now cost the same. Bills become easier to read. These updates follow customer requests. People wanted clearer costs. They also wanted lower prices. Google delivered both. A company leader explained the shift. “We heard our users,” he said. “They needed straightforward pricing. Now businesses can plan better.” The update covers all storage types. This includes Standard, Nearline, Coldline, and Archive. Current users move automatically. No action is required. Changes happen on the first of next month. Google removed location-based fees. One price works worldwide now. Global companies benefit. They pay the same everywhere. Small teams get free storage too. First 10 gigabytes cost nothing. This helps new projects. Startups can test without spending. Google hopes this attracts more customers. Existing users grow easier. Costs stay manageable at every scale. The move fits Google’s wider cloud strategy. It makes technology more affordable. It shows customer focus matters. Businesses avoid unexpected charges. They expand storage confidently.
(Google Cloud Storage New Pricing Plan)