Updated July 7, 2026
Wedding Arrivals vs Google Photos for collecting wedding guest photos
A shared Google Photos album is the free, familiar way to collect wedding photos, and for some couples it is the right call. But it was built to organise your own library, not to collect photos from 150 guests — and that difference shows up in the two things that decide whether an album fills up: whether guests can upload without an account, and whether the photos actually arrive.
Here is the honest head-to-head — where Google Photos wins, where it struggles, and when a purpose-built gallery like Wedding Arrivals is worth paying for.
Verdict
The short answer
At a glance
Side by side
| What matters for guest photos | Google Photos | Wedding Arrivals |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free (with a Google account) | From $49, one-time |
| Guest needs an account to upload | Yes | No |
| Scan-a-QR-and-upload flow | No | Yes |
| Full-resolution originals | Yes, in "Original quality" mode | Yes, always byte-exact |
| Uploads count against… | each guest's own 15 GB | the couple, not guests |
| Moderation / hide uploads | No | Yes |
| Live reception slideshow | No | Yes (Standard plan and up) |
| Watch a guest video | After Google finishes processing it (can show “still processing”) | Plays in the album, no processing wait |
| Download everything at once | Download all (zip) from the album | One-click full-resolution ZIP |
| Kept forever | Yes (no auto-delete) | No — 6 months to 2 years by plan |
The two rows that decide most weddings are "guest needs an account" and "uploads count against each guest's own 15 GB". Together they are why a free Google album can look perfect when you test it yourself and still collect less than you hoped from a big, mixed-age group — some guests may not sign in, and some can hit their own storage limit.
Be fair
Where Google Photos genuinely wins
- It is free. No purchase, no plan — if budget is the only thing that matters, this is hard to beat.
- It is permanent. Shared albums have no auto-delete; the photos sit in your library for as long as you keep the account. Our storage window is time-limited (6 months to 2 years by plan), so on longevity Google Photos wins.
- Original quality is byte-exact. In "Original quality" mode, Google keeps the untouched files (they do count against storage). Set to "Storage saver" and it compresses — so choose the mode deliberately.
- It is familiar, and it plugs into face grouping and search across your own library.
If your guest list is small, everyone already lives in Google, and you just want a free bucket you keep forever, a shared album is a perfectly good choice — and cheaper than us. We would rather tell you that than pretend otherwise.
The catch
Where Google Photos struggles for guest collection
Google Photos
- Price:
- Free
- Guests:
- Account required
Pros
- Free, and originals are preserved in "Original quality" mode
- Kept forever — no auto-delete
- Familiar; integrates with your own library
Cons
- Every guest needs a Google account just to upload (link-viewing works without one; adding a photo does not)
- Uploads count against each guest's own 15 GB — a guest whose storage is full is blocked, and the photo never arrives
- No QR scan-and-upload page, no moderation or approval, no live event slideshow
- Guests' uploads mix into their personal libraries
Wedding Arrivals
- Price:
- From $49 one-time
- Guests:
- No account
Pros
- No app or account — guests scan a QR code and upload in the browser
- Unlimited guests and uploads; byte-exact originals
- Moderation (hide/remove, optional hold-for-approval) and a live venue slideshow
- Uploads go straight from the phone to storage on Cloudflare's global network — nothing counts against a guest's own storage
- Videos play right away, and you download everything as one full-resolution ZIP
- One-time price, no subscription
Cons
- Costs money — Google Photos is free
- Storage is time-limited (6–24 months by plan); Google Photos keeps yours forever
- Live slideshow and audio guestbook are on higher tiers
Costs
Is Google Photos really free for a wedding?
For the couple, yes — the album itself costs nothing. The hidden cost lands on your guests: every upload counts against their own 15 GB of Google storage, shared with their Gmail and Drive. Many people already have that 15 GB close to full with their own photos and email, so an upload can be refused — and unlike a subscription warning, they may not realise the photo never made it.
Our $49 one-time fee buys the couple out of that problem: guests upload with no account and nothing counts against their storage, so the album is not hostage to how full someone else's Gmail is. Whether that is worth $49 is a fair question — if your crowd is small and Google-native, it may not be; if you have 150 mixed-generation guests, it usually is.
Decide
Which is right for your wedding?
Lean Google Photos for a small, tech-comfortable, Google-using crowd where free-and-forever matters more than a one-tap experience — an elopement, a close-family dinner, a group that already shares albums together.
Lean Wedding Arrivals for a bigger, mixed-generation guest list where the goal is maximum photos with minimum friction: a QR on every table, no accounts, moderation so nothing awkward hits the screen, and a live slideshow at the reception — collected reliably on the one day you cannot redo.
Frequently asked questions
No. Guests can view a shared Google Photos album from a link without an account, but the moment they try to add a photo, Google requires them to sign into a Google account (per Google's own help). In a mixed-age crowd, some guests will not have an account or will not want to create one, so a share of photos never arrives. Wedding Arrivals needs no account: guests scan a QR code and upload from the browser.
It can. In "Original quality" mode Google Photos keeps the untouched files, but those count against storage; in "Storage saver" mode it compresses them. So you get originals only if the mode is set correctly — worth checking before the wedding, since "Storage saver" is a common default.
Each contributor's own 15 GB of Google storage, shared with their Gmail and Drive — not the album owner's. If a guest's account is already full, their upload is blocked and the photo never reaches your album. With Wedding Arrivals, uploads go to the couple's gallery and nothing counts against a guest's personal storage.
Not really. Anyone with access to a shared album can add photos and everyone sees them immediately; there is no approval queue or hide control for the owner. Wedding Arrivals lets the couple hide or remove any upload, with an optional hold-for-approval mode so nothing appears until you allow it.
No. Google Photos has no live event slideshow that fills up on a screen as guests upload during the reception. Wedding Arrivals includes a live venue slideshow (on the Standard plan and up) designed for exactly that.
On Google Photos an uploaded video is often processed before others can play it, so viewers may see a “still processing, check back later” message. Wedding Arrivals plays a guest's video in the album right away and adds adaptive streaming once it's ready, so there is no processing wait.
Yes — the album is free for the couple, versus a one-time fee from $49 for Wedding Arrivals. The trade-off is that Google Photos pushes friction onto guests (account required, their own storage used) and gives the couple no moderation, QR flow, or live slideshow. If budget is the only priority, Google Photos wins; if guest participation and control matter, the one-time fee usually pays for itself.
Google Photos keeps a shared album until you delete it — effectively forever, as long as the account stays active. Wedding Arrivals keeps them for a set window (6 months to 2 years depending on plan), so you should download your originals soon after the wedding. On sheer longevity, Google Photos wins.