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06 January 26, 08:57
Quote:Google has rolled out a long-requested feature for organizations looking to consolidate cloud storage. Google Workspace now lets admins migrate files, folders, and permissions directly from Dropbox into Google Drive using its New Data Migration service.
The capability exits open beta this week and is generally available across most Workspace plans. The goal is straightforward: reduce the friction of switching storage platforms by handling structure, access, and ongoing changes without third-party tools or disruptive cutovers.
![[Image: photo_2026-01-06_09-47-08-scaled.jpg]](https://www.ghacks.net/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/photo_2026-01-06_09-47-08-scaled.jpg)
A purpose-built path for Dropbox Business
This is not a basic export-and-import workflow. The New Data Migration service is designed for Dropbox Business accounts and preserves existing folder hierarchies and sharing permissions during the transfer. When the data lands in Google Drive, either in users' My Drive or in Shared Drives, access controls remain intact, minimizing confusion for end users.
Admins can run migrations in batches, with support for up to 150 Dropbox users or team folders at a time. That staged approach allows IT teams to move departments gradually, verify results, and address exceptions before expanding the scope. It also fits organizations that want to standardize Drive usage as part of the move, rather than copying everything wholesale and cleaning up later.
Reporting that shows exactly what happened
Visibility is one of the strongest parts of the new service. Google provides detailed, real-time reporting that tracks which files migrated successfully and which were skipped. Those reports can be exported for auditing or troubleshooting-useful for large environments where data integrity and accountability matter.
Skipped items are identified clearly, which helps admins address permission conflicts, unsupported items, or naming issues without guesswork. For enterprises and education customers, this level of transparency reduces the risk typically associated with storage migrations.
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