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Files, storage, and quota

Connect file questions to storage usage, storage add-ons, and over-quota recovery.

Files helps you investigate storage, but billing controls the limit

Files is the best place to understand which files are listed in your workspace, where large files are used, and which old attachments may no longer be needed. Storage limits, billing ownership, plan changes, and storage add-ons are handled through account and billing settings.

Use Files when you need evidence: which project contains the large video, whether old PDFs are still attached to active canvases, or which team uploaded a batch of media. Use billing settings when you need to change the plan, add storage, resolve payment, or confirm the workspace quota.

For plan-specific storage guidance, see Storage limits, Storage add-ons, and Open billing.

How Files relates to storage usage

A file row usually shows where a file appears in your workspace. That context is important for cleanup decisions, but storage totals may not change one-to-one with every visible row. The same uploaded file can appear in more than one place, files removed from a canvas can remain recoverable for a time, and storage calculations can include data that is not shown as a simple file row.

Check storage usage before and after cleanup. The Files view helps you identify files taking space, and Workspace Settings → Usage can show file storage usage and quota when that view is available to you.

Treat Files as the investigation surface, not as the final billing ledger. If the storage number does not change immediately after removing a file from a canvas, that does not automatically mean removal failed. Check whether the file was duplicated elsewhere, whether it is still recoverable in Trash, and whether billing storage updates need time or an admin action.

Find large files

Open Files and sort by largest when storage cleanup is the goal. If the workspace is large, start with a project that is likely to contain heavy files: workshops, video reviews, brand assets, research, client handoffs, or archived launch projects.

Use type filters to focus on storage-heavy formats. Videos, high-resolution images, PDFs, design exports, and compressed archives often explain sudden storage jumps. Filter by uploader or date when you know a recent import caused the issue.

Before removing anything, open the containing canvas. A large file may still be the source file for a live presentation, dashboard, workshop, or client review. Storage cleanup that removes active material creates more work than it saves.

Clean up safely

A safe cleanup flow is:

  1. Open Files.
  2. Sort by largest.
  3. Filter by project, file type, uploader, or upload date if the list is too broad.
  4. Preview the file.
  5. Open the containing canvas.
  6. Confirm the file is no longer needed.
  7. Remove the file from the canvas.
  8. Check Trash if permanent deletion is required and your role allows it.

Removal from a canvas is usually recoverable for a limited time through Trash. Permanent deletion is stricter and irreversible. Do not use permanent deletion casually just to make a list look cleaner. See Remove a file from a canvas, Restore deleted work, and Delete work forever.

When storage is over the limit

When a workspace is over its storage limit, files may remain visible while preview, download, or upload behavior is limited. Cleanup remains available: users with the right permission can still remove files from canvases, and people with the right Trash permission can permanently delete those items from Trash when the team has confirmed they are no longer needed.

The exact user experience can depend on plan state and workspace settings, but the practical recovery path is the same: check current usage, identify what is taking space, decide what can be removed, and have a billing owner resolve the plan or quota if cleanup is not enough. For billing-side recovery, see Fix storage limits.

If you are not a billing owner, gather useful details before asking for help:

DetailWhy it helps
Workspace nameStorage is workspace-specific.
Affected file namesLets the owner verify whether specific files are expired or unavailable.
Containing projects or canvasesHelps the team decide what can be removed safely.
Approximate file sizesHelps prioritize cleanup.
What action failedDistinguishes upload, preview, download, and removal problems.

If the workspace needs more storage, use Storage add-ons. If payment or plan state is blocking access, use Fix a payment issue or contact the billing owner.

Expired and unavailable files

If a file is marked expired or unavailable, do not assume the row should be deleted. The row can still show where the file belonged, which is useful for recovery, replacement, or support. Deleting that item can make the investigation harder.

Start with Unavailable and retention-locked files. Then check storage settings and the containing canvas. If the file is still needed, an owner may need to resolve storage state, restore the file where it belonged, or re-upload the source file.

Storage cleanup and Trash

Trash can contain files removed from canvases during the retention window. Restoring an item can bring the file back to the work where it belonged, while permanent deletion removes the normal recovery path. Automatic retention cleanup can also remove old Trash items after the retention window.

Do not assume Trash is a long-term storage archive. If you removed a file by mistake, restore it quickly. If you are permanently deleting files for storage reasons, make sure the team agrees and that the containing work no longer needs them. See Retention window and Empty Trash.

Permissions and billing roles

File cleanup and billing changes are often owned by different people. A project editor may be able to remove files from a canvas but not change the workspace storage plan. A billing owner may be able to add storage but may not know which project files are safe to remove. A workspace admin may be able to manage Trash actions that regular members cannot.

When storage is urgent, coordinate the roles instead of guessing. The person who understands the work should identify files that are safe to remove. The person who manages billing should check plan state and add storage if needed. The person with permanent deletion permission should only delete after the team confirms recovery is no longer needed.

For role questions, see Members, guests, and external collaborators and Change a member's role.

When storage numbers do not match what you expect

If the storage number seems too high, remember that Files may not show every storage detail as a simple list of current rows. Deleted but recoverable files, files used in more than one place, old projects, large media, and files outside the current project scope can all affect what you see.

Clear Files filters and check workspace-level Files. Sort by largest. Then check Trash for recently removed large files. If you are only looking inside one project, broaden the scope because storage is usually workspace-level.

If the number still looks wrong, contact support with the workspace name, storage number shown, examples of large files you expected to count or not count, and cleanup steps already taken. For support routing, see Contact support.

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