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Google Photos → Ente

End-to-end encrypted photo storage. Your memories encrypted before they leave your device. Available on Android, iOS, Windows, Mac, Linux, and web.

About 45 minutes Takes commitment
1

Install Ente

3 minutes

Download Ente Photos from ente.io. It is available on Android (Google Play and F-Droid), iOS (App Store), Windows, Mac, Linux, and as a web app. Install it on your phone first — that is where most photos are. The app is open source and has been independently audited for security.

What you should see

The Ente app opens on your phone with a clean interface. No ads, no tracking prompts.

2

Create your account and choose a plan

3 minutes

Open the app and create an account. Ente offers a free trial to get started, then paid plans from 10GB upwards. Choose a storage plan based on your photo library size (check Google Photos settings to see how much storage you use). Ente stores your data encrypted across three data centres in different countries for redundancy. Set a strong password and save your recovery key somewhere safe — if you lose both, your photos are unrecoverable.

What you should see

You are logged into Ente. Your storage plan and recovery key are confirmed.

3

Export from Google Photos

20 minutes

Go to takeout.google.com. Click "Deselect all", then check only "Google Photos". Click "Next step", choose ".zip" format and a file size that suits your internet speed. Click "Create export". Google will prepare your photos and email you download links. This can take hours or even days for large libraries. Download all the zip files and extract them to a folder on your computer.

What you should see

A folder containing all your photos organised by album or date. Open a few to confirm they look correct.

4

Upload photos to Ente

15 minutes to start

Use the Ente desktop app or web interface to upload your exported photos. Drag folders into Ente — it preserves your album structure. Every photo is encrypted on your device before upload, so Ente staff cannot see your images. Large libraries will take time to upload. Let it run in the background. You can continue using your device normally while it uploads.

What you should see

Photos appear in the Ente app on all your devices. Albums are preserved. Images display correctly.

5

Enable auto-backup on your phone

2 minutes

In the Ente app, go to Settings → Backup and enable automatic backup for your camera roll. Choose whether to back up on WiFi only or also on mobile data. New photos and videos will be encrypted and backed up automatically. Disable Google Photos auto-backup (Google Photos app → profile icon → Photos settings → Backup → turn off) so you are not running two backups.

What you should see

Take a new photo. Within minutes, it appears in Ente on your other devices. Google Photos backup is off.

Troubleshooting

Google Takeout export is enormous
Large photo libraries (50GB+) can take days to export from Google. Choose smaller zip file sizes (2GB each) so individual downloads are manageable. You do not need to export everything at once — start with recent years and add older photos over time.
Photo metadata or dates are wrong after export
Google Takeout exports metadata as separate JSON files alongside each photo. Ente's import tool reads these JSON files to preserve dates and locations. If dates appear wrong, ensure you upload the JSON files together with the photos, not just the images alone.
No AI search like Google Photos
Ente cannot search your photos by content ("show me photos of dogs") because the images are encrypted — even Ente cannot see them. Search works by date, album name, and file name. Google Photos' AI search is genuinely useful and currently has no encrypted equivalent. This is a real trade-off for privacy.
Ente costs money — Google Photos was free
Google Photos is free because Google uses your photos to train AI models and target advertising. Ente charges for storage because encryption and privacy have real infrastructure costs. Plans start at a few dollars per month. If cost is a concern, start with a smaller plan and be selective about what you back up.

What to do next