Home › Comparisons › Proton Drive vs Tresorit
HONEST COMPARISONTwo tools, one job. Here is the trade-off as our research found it — no winner-by-default, no invented numbers.
In the dossier the field is broader: “Tresorit or Google Drive” — this page focuses on the most common head-to-head.
| PRICING | (2026) Free 2-5 GB; Drive Plus about $3.99/mo annual (200 GB); Proton Unlimited ~$9.99/mo (500 GB plus Mail, VPN, Pass); Family ~$23.99/mo (6 people); Drive Professional ~$7.99/user/mo (1 TB, business). | (2026) Personal: free 3GB tier, paid from ~$4.75/mo (annual) up to Pro ~$33.99/mo (4TB); Business Standard about $18/user/mo, Business Plus ~$24/user/mo (annual), Enterprise custom with SSO, watermarking and data-reside… |
| GENUINELY BEST FOR | privacy-conscious individuals and businesses that want genuinely end-to-end-encrypted storage from a Swiss provider, ideally as part of the wider Proton suite | businesses and professionals with confidentiality obligations (legal, health, finance) that need end-to-end-encrypted storage, granular sharing controls and compliance features |
| SKIP IT IF | your workflow lives on deep integrations, shared-drive collaboration and full-text search (mainstream clouds do that better), or you'd never set up account recovery | you want cheap bulk storage or deep app integrations (mainstream clouds win), or a personal-grade E2EE like Proton Drive covers your needs at lower cost |
| THE HONEST KNOCK | End-to-end encryption is the point and the price: because Proton can't read your files, there's no server-side search inside documents, previews and third-party integrations are more limited than Google Drive or Dropbox… | You pay the Swiss-E2EE premium — noticeably above mainstream clouds and above Proton Drive per GB — and the encryption trade-offs are inherent: no server-side content search, more deliberate sharing flows, and credentia… |
Pick Proton Drive if you’re privacy-conscious individuals and businesses that want genuinely end-to-end-encrypted storage from a Swiss provider, ideally as part of the wider Proton suite. Walk away if your workflow lives on deep integrations, shared-drive collaboration and full-text search (mainstream clouds do that better), or you'd never set up account recovery — in that case the comparison above tells you where to look instead.
Try Proton Drive →Read the full Proton Drive review
There is no universal winner — it depends on the job. Tresorit is the enterprise E2EE peer; Google Drive is the convenience default — Proton wins on suite value per euro for individuals
Proton Drive is genuinely best for privacy-conscious individuals and businesses that want genuinely end-to-end-encrypted storage from a Swiss provider, ideally as part of the wider Proton suite. Skip it if your workflow lives on deep integrations, shared-drive collaboration and full-text search (mainstream clouds do that better), or you'd never set up account recovery.
End-to-end encryption is the point and the price: because Proton can't read your files, there's no server-side search inside documents, previews and third-party integrations are more limited than Google Drive or Dropbox, and losing your credentials without recovery set up means losing data — by des…
This comparison is our researched assessment — not a paid placement. Some links are affiliate links: we may earn a commission if you sign up, at no extra cost to you, and it never changes the take. How we review →