Flickr Is About to Delete Tons of Photos. Here’s How to Save Yours Before They’re Gone

Flickr announced in November it would be changing its generous photo storage allotment for free users, restricting them to a 1,000-photo limit, and threatening to delete excess photos unless you upgrade to a paid account by Tuesday, Feb. 5.

If you’re not a fan of subscribing to another service, or just want to make sure your Flickr photos are safe from destruction, here’s how to rescue your photos (and save yourself some money) before they’re lost forever.

What’s happening to my Flickr photos?

In 2013, Flickr, then owned by Yahoo!, expanded its storage option for users, offering them one terabyte (1,000 gigabytes) of storage space for photos for free. That’s enough space for anywhere from 250,000 to 500,000 images, a far cry from the previous free user limit of 200 photos. By comparison, Microsoft’s OneDrive cloud storage charges $6.99 per month for one terabyte of storage.

After its acquisition by SmugMug in April, Flickr updated its photo storage terms, imposing a new of limit 1,000 photos for free users. The new rule also jeopardized the existence of any extra images its 100 million users had.

“On February 5, 2019, photos and videos over the free account 1,000 item limit will be at risk of deletion beginning with the oldest photos and videos,” Flickr said in a statement.

According to the company’s announcement, users with fewer than 1,000 photos — 97% of Flickr’s free users — will not be affected by the change.

How can I save my Flickr library?

Flickr makes it pretty easy for you to download your photos, though it may take some time depending on the size of your library.

Flickr’s export tool will let you download the entirety of your Flickr account, including your photos and videos, comments, descriptions and other profile information.

To initiate a download request, visit your Flickr account page and scroll down to the Your Flickr Data section. From there you can request your data and wait for the email containing a series of compressed files with your Flickr history and content inside.

Importing your photos into another cloud storage program like Google Photos is also an option, as long as you unzip the Flickr download and instruct your cloud storage service to back up photos in the newly created folder.

Don’t feel like waiting on an email from Flickr? You could always push it off another month and subscribe to a Flickr Pro account, for $5.99 per month for unlimited photo storage, among other perks.

Regardless of your choice, you should export your photos anyway, and hang onto the export file just in case.

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