PhotoSort vs Google Photos
Google Photos is the most popular photo tool in the world. PhotoSort is built for people who don't want their photos in Google's cloud. Here's an honest, side-by-side comparison to help you decide which one fits your needs.
The short answer: If you're happy with your photos living in Google's servers and you want powerful search and sharing, Google Photos is excellent — and free for compressed photos. If you want your photos to stay on your own computer, organized into real folders you control, PhotoSort is the better choice.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | PhotoSort | Google Photos |
|---|---|---|
| Photos stored on your computer | Yes — always | No — uploaded to Google servers |
| Photos uploaded to the cloud | Never | Always (required) |
| Real folder structure on disk | Yes — Year/Month-Event folders | No — photos locked in app albums |
| Works without internet | Yes (after first setup) | No — requires internet connection |
| AI event detection | Yes — trips, weddings, concerts, hiking, and more | Yes — faces, places, objects |
| Automatic folder naming | Yes — e.g., "2024/07-Portugal" | No real folder naming (album titles only) |
| Cost | €9.99 one-time, no subscription | Free for compressed; $2.99/mo for 100GB original quality |
| No account required | Yes — no sign-in needed | Google account required |
| Sharing photos with others | No built-in sharing | Yes — links, albums, family sharing |
| Works on Windows, Mac, Linux | Yes (Chrome or Edge browser) | Yes (any browser) |
| Can be used without Google account | Yes | No |
| Photos available if service shuts down | Yes — stored on your own computer | Requires export via Google Takeout |
The Privacy Difference
The biggest difference between PhotoSort and Google Photos is where your photos live. Google Photos works by uploading every photo you take to Google's servers. Once uploaded, Google uses your photos to train its AI models and serve you more relevant ads. You can opt out of some uses, but the upload itself is unavoidable — it's how the product works.
PhotoSort takes the opposite approach. Your photos never leave your computer. The AI model (CLIP) runs directly in your browser — the same way a web game runs without sending your moves to a server. The only data that leaves your device is GPS coordinates (sent to OpenStreetMap for place names) and short text descriptions (sent to Gemini for folder naming). Your actual photo files are never transmitted anywhere.
This matters for people who care about:
- Keeping personal family photos off corporate servers
- Not contributing photos to AI training datasets
- Avoiding ongoing monthly fees for storage
- Maintaining complete control of their photo library
Folder Control: The Practical Difference
Google Photos organizes photos into "albums" inside the Google Photos app. These albums don't correspond to real folders on your computer. If you want to use your photos in another app, email them, copy them to a different drive, or simply browse them in Windows Explorer or Mac Finder, you're working with a flat, unorganized pile unless you export them first.
PhotoSort creates a real folder structure on your hard drive: Photos/2024/07-Portugal/, Photos/2024/08-Wedding/, and so on. These are standard folders that work in every app, every operating system, and will still be organized in 20 years regardless of what happens to PhotoSort as a product.
When to Choose Google Photos
- You want to access your photos from multiple devices without manual syncing
- You rely heavily on Google Photos' face recognition for finding specific people
- You want easy photo sharing with family or friends via links
- You don't mind your photos being stored on Google's servers
- You're primarily organizing phone photos and don't need a local folder structure
When to Choose PhotoSort
- You want your photos to stay on your own computer — not on any cloud server
- You want a real, organized folder structure you can use in any app
- You have a large backlog of photos on a hard drive that need organizing
- You don't want to pay monthly fees or create a Google account
- You want to organize RAW files, HEIC, or other formats Google sometimes degrades
- You have an existing local photo archive that needs structuring
Frequently Asked Questions
Does PhotoSort work with photos already in Google Photos?
Yes. Export your Google Photos library using Google Takeout, unzip the files to a local folder, and run PhotoSort on that folder. PhotoSort will sort them into Year/Month-EventName folders on your computer. You end up with a clean local library that doesn't depend on Google.
Can PhotoSort replace Google Photos completely?
For local organization and privacy, yes. PhotoSort creates a better local folder structure than Google Photos ever could. What it doesn't do is cross-device syncing or photo sharing via links — if those features are important to you, you'd need to keep using Google Photos or add a sync tool like Syncthing alongside PhotoSort.
Is PhotoSort actually free like Google Photos?
PhotoSort costs €9.99 as a one-time purchase — no monthly fee. Google Photos is free for compressed photos but charges $2.99/month for 100GB of original-quality storage. If you have a large library over several years, you'll spend more on Google Photos storage than on PhotoSort's one-time fee within a year.
Does Google Photos have AI photo organization?
Google Photos has strong AI features: face recognition, object search, memory creation, and scene detection. PhotoSort's AI focuses specifically on organizing photos into event-based folders — it detects trips, concerts, weddings, hikes, and other events and creates named folders automatically. They solve different problems: Google Photos is optimized for searching; PhotoSort is optimized for organizing into a local folder structure.
What happens to my Google Photos if I switch to PhotoSort?
Your Google Photos stay exactly as they are — PhotoSort doesn't touch them. To move your library off Google Photos, use Google Takeout to export everything first, then organize the downloaded files with PhotoSort. You can keep your Google Photos account while also having a local organized copy.
Try PhotoSort for Yourself
See the full proposed folder structure before you buy. The AI analysis runs free in your browser — no account, no upload.
Get PhotoSort for €9.99 →