Google Photos Users Are Leaving — Where Are They Going?

Free unlimited storage is gone. Privacy concerns are mounting. Reddit is full of users asking the same question: what do I do with all my travel photos now? The exodus is real — and the alternatives aren't great for travelers.

The quiet exodus from Google Photos

For years, Google Photos was the obvious choice. Unlimited free storage. Automatic backup. Smart search that could find "sunset in Bali" with one tap. It felt like magic.

That magic started fading in June 2021 when free unlimited storage ended. But the real turning point came in 2025 and 2026, as accounts hit their caps, storage policies shifted without warning, and users realized: our decade of travel memories is locked in someone else's cloud.

On Reddit, the signs are unmistakable. Threads titled "The wave of users leaving Google Photos" and "Are there any good alternatives?" are accumulating upvotes and hundreds of comments. Users who've stored 10+ years of photos are asking the same question: where do we go now?

Why travelers are leading the charge

Travelers feel the pain more acutely than most. A weekend trip to Tokyo might produce 400 photos. A month backpacking through Southeast Asia? Thousands. Travel photos are the ones we actually revisit — the sunset over Angkor Wat, the street food stall in Bangkok, the accidental perfect shot from a moving train in Sri Lanka.

But Google Photos was never designed for travel photo management. It's a dump for everything — screenshots, memes, receipts, dog photos, and your best travel shots all in one endless scroll. There's no concept of a "trip." No map that shows where each photo was taken. No way to say "these 300 photos belong to my Kyoto trip, keep them together."

And when Google Takeout exports break your EXIF data — as users on r/googlephotos have documented — you lose the GPS coordinates that make travel photos meaningful. Someone even built a third-party tool just to fix Takeout's broken metadata. That's how bad it is.

The alternatives landscape: not great for travelers

So what are the options? Let's look at what Reddit users are actually discussing:

Self-hosted solutions like Immich. Powerful, but requires a server. On r/degoogle, users explicitly say "NOT Immich — I don't want to run a server." Setting up a NAS, configuring Docker, managing backups — this is a hobby, not a solution for most people.

Phone gallery apps. They store photos. That's it. No travel timeline, no map overlay, no trip grouping. Your Kyoto photos sit next to screenshots of grocery lists.

Cloud storage like iCloud or Dropbox. A file dump with folders. You might organize by date or location manually, but it's you against thousands of files. No map. No trip context. Just files.

Travel tracking apps like Polarsteps. They do maps and timelines, but upload everything to their cloud. Your photos leave your device. Privacy becomes someone else's business model.

Travel photos deserve better than a file dump

Here's what travel photos actually need: a map. When you revisit your photos, you want to see them pinned to the places they were taken — the café in Shibuya, the viewpoint in Cappadocia, the beach in Tulum. A chronological feed can't do that. A folder structure can't do that. Only a map can.

They also need trip grouping. Your 2024 Japan trip should exist as its own collection. Open it, and you see the route you took, the photos at each stop, the timeline of your journey. Not mixed in with random screenshots and work documents.

And they need to stay yours. Not uploaded to a server you don't control. Not scanned for AI training data. Not suddenly restricted by a policy change. Your memories, on your device, under your control.

Wimemo: a travel photo home that stays local

This is exactly why Wimemo exists. It's built around three principles that matter for travel memories:

Local-first processing. Everything happens on your device. Photos never leave your phone unless you choose to share them. No cloud upload. No server. No account scanning your memories.

Atlas world map. Every photo with GPS data appears as a pin on your personal world map. Zoom in on Tokyo and see exactly where you stood. Tap a pin and relive that moment. It's the most natural way to browse travel memories — geographically, the way you experienced them.

Together albums. Traveling with friends or family? Everyone's photos can merge into a shared trip map. No cloud required. Each person's photos stay on their device, but the trip view combines them seamlessly. Finally, one album for the whole group.

And it works offline. Abroad, with no data plan, your travel photos and maps are still available. No "loading" spinner while you're trying to show someone that photo from yesterday.

The migration doesn't have to be painful

If you're one of the many Google Photos users looking for an exit, here's the good news: you don't need to set up a server. You don't need to learn Docker. You don't need to trust another cloud provider with your most personal memories.

You just need an app that treats your travel photos like what they are: the story of where you've been, told on a map, kept private, and always available — even offline, even years later, even when tech giants change their policies again.

The Google Photos exodus is happening. The question is whether your next photo home will actually understand what travel memories mean.

Keep your travel photos yours

Wimemo organizes your travel photos locally on a map. No cloud upload. No server setup. Just your memories, your way.

Try Wimemo