“Half of my life is on this app and now they expect us to pay for it.” This comment reflects the anger among Snapchat users after the company announced plans to charge for storing old photos and videos. Many say the platform is monetizing nostalgia and betraying long-time users.
Charging for digital memories
In September, Snap, the company behind Snapchat, revealed that users who store more than five gigabytes of Memories will need to pay. For many, these photos and videos capture years of milestones, friendships, and personal moments, making the change feel like a betrayal.
Snap defended the move, comparing it to Apple and Google’s paid cloud storage. The company said users could download their Memories to their devices if they prefer not to pay, though that may involve managing tens of gigabytes of files.
A spokesperson said only a small number of users would be affected. They admitted that moving from free to paid service “is never easy” but insisted it would be “worth the cost.” Many users online disagree.
The ‘memory tax’ sparks outrage
An online petition has labeled the new charge a “memory tax.” Users called it “ridiculous,” “unethical,” and “dystopian.” Many vowed to delete the app rather than pay.
On Google Play, user Natacha Jonsson left a one-star review. “If I know millennials right, most of us have years worth of memories on Snapchat,” she wrote. “And most of us only kept the app for that reason. 5GB is absolutely nothing when you have years of memories… Bye Snap.”
London journalism student Guste Ven, 20, shared on TikTok that she plans to quit the app. “I downloaded all my memories as soon as I could,” she told a news outlet. “Almost all of my teenage years are on Snapchat. Charging for something that has always been free doesn’t make sense.”
Longtime users feel abandoned
Snapchat has not yet revealed how much the new storage plans will cost in the UK. The company said the rollout will happen gradually worldwide.
Amber Daley, 23, from London, said she would be “distraught” if the fees are introduced. She has used Snapchat daily since 2014 and described it as “a part of everyday life.”
Amber said she understood that the platform needs revenue but argued the Memories feature holds deep personal value. “It’s unfair to charge loyal users who have supported the app for years,” she said. “These aren’t just called Memories — they are our real memories.”
The cost of cloud storage
Charging for storage is common. Millions already pay Apple or Google to protect their photos and videos. But Snapchat users feel differently because they built their archives under the expectation of free storage.
“Hosting trillions of Memories isn’t cheap,” said social media consultant Matt Navarra. “Snapchat must cover storage, bandwidth, encryption, backups, and content delivery.” He added that the move feels like a “bait and switch.” “Encouraging users to archive their lives for years and then charging them doesn’t feel right,” he said. “These Memories aren’t just files — they are emotional artefacts.”
When memories become a business
Many users share that view. One reviewer called their saved photos and videos “the most precious thing to me.” “They include everything — births, losses, family moments, friendships, and my teenage years,” they wrote.
Dr. Taylor Annabell, a postdoctoral researcher at Utrecht University, said Snapchat’s move highlights the risks of trusting commercial platforms with personal history. “These companies profit from user trust and the illusion of endless access,” she said. “It keeps people tied to the app, scrolling through their past. But they are not guardians of our memories — they are businesses selling access to them.”
