Pay for what you back up. Nothing more.
Start with 1,000 free photo backups. After that, buy one-time credit packs — no subscription, and credits never expire.
- All three backup modes
- Your private photos included
- Albums, metadata & EXIF
- No credit card required
- Credits never expire
- Re-downloads free within 7 days
- Works across all modes
- Credits never expire
- Re-downloads free within 7 days
- Works across all modes
- Credits never expire
- Re-downloads free within 7 days
- Works across all modes
Prices in USD. Larger packs cost less per photo.
Simple, honest metering.
Each successfully backed-up original photo uses one credit.
Listing albums and reading photo metadata never costs a credit.
Re-downloading the same photo within 7 days is free — great for incremental backups.
Buy credits once. They never expire, and there’s nothing to cancel.
Manage your credits on the web.
FlickrVault doesn’t sell credits inside the app. Log in on this website to view your credit balance, and — once paid credit packs go live — to buy more, with Paddle handling checkout and taxes as merchant of record. For now, download FlickrVault and start with 1,000 free photo backups.
Get FlickrVaultQuestions about credits.
How do I pay?
Log in on this website to view your credits. When paid packs go live you’ll buy them here, with Paddle as merchant of record handling checkout (taxes/VAT included). Paid purchasing is rolling out — until then, the packs above are shown for information.
Is the free allowance per device or per account?
It’s 1,000 free credits, one-time, per Flickr account. Re-creating an account with the same Flickr identity doesn’t re-grant it.
What exactly counts as a credit?
One credit per original photo saved to your disk. Re-fetching the same photo within 7 days doesn’t cost another credit.
Do credits expire?
No. There is no subscription, and purchased credits never expire.
Can I get a refund?
Credits are digital goods delivered immediately. See our Terms of Service for details, and contact [email protected] if something went wrong.