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A persistent pattern of consumer complaints describes Dropbox auto-renewing annual subscriptions without clear advance notice, burying the downgrade option, and refusing refunds for unused time — practices now drawing legal scrutiny under state automatic-renewal laws.
In June 2019 Dropbox doubled the Plus plan's storage from 1TB to 2TB but raised the price from roughly $9.99 to $11.99 per month, bundling in features many individual users did not want and giving them no way to keep the cheaper, smaller plan.
Dropbox advertises Plus at $9.99 per month but charges $11.99 if you pay monthly instead of annually — a roughly 20% premium that pairs with non-refundable annual terms and auto-renewal to penalize the flexibility customers might want.
When an account exceeds its quota, Dropbox can halt syncing — the core function users depend on — until they delete files or pay more, while the path to downgrade a plan or step back to free is comparatively buried, wrapped in loss warnings, and locked behind non-refundable annual terms.