

Those on a Dropbox Plus or Business Standard subscription still have the same seven-day expiry limit, but they can transfer up to 2GB worth of files at a time. However, paid users on the Professional, Business Advanced, Enterprise, or Education plans can set the expiry time for seven, 30, 60, or 90 days and are afforded 100GB for each transfer. On the free tier, users can share files of up to 100MB, which will expire after seven days. While Dropbox Transfer is available on all pricing tiers, the features will vary according to the plan. After you send it, viewership stats let you see how many times the transfer's been accessed.Above: Dropbox Transfer stats and expiry settings You'll get a link you can send to anyone-even if they aren't on Dropbox.

You can even password protect it and set an expiration date to encourage recipients to download the files. Just select files from your hard drive or Dropbox account to create your transfer. Transfer, though, lets you send up to 100 GB of files in just a few clicks. And Dropbox shared links are best for when recipients need access to always up-to-date files. No giving people edit access to your originals, no links that let people download updates you make later-just, “Here are your files!” While email might work for a JPEG or two, collections of large multimedia files easily go well beyond the typical 25 MB attachment limit. Transfer is our answer to a common problem: Sometimes you simply want to hand off files. We're excited to help everyone easily deliver files, so today we're rolling Transfer out to all Dropbox users, along with new features. Transfer is designed for times when you need to turn over large collections of final files to clients and other people outside your company.
