Apple has quietly introduced a significant change to iCloud Shared Albums in iOS 27, affecting users who rely on the feature to store and share photos and videos over long periods. Under the updated system, new content added to certain shared albums will now count against the album owner’s iCloud storage quota.
The change was first spotted in the developer beta version of iOS 27. While Apple presents the update as an enhancement to the Shared Albums experience, many users view it as the end of a long-standing benefit that allowed media to be stored without consuming personal iCloud storage.
For more than a decade, Shared Albums enabled users to store up to 5,000 photos and videos without affecting their available iCloud space. This made the feature a popular option for sharing memories with friends and family while avoiding additional cloud storage costs.
With iOS 27, however, that advantage is changing. When users choose to upgrade an existing shared album, the Photos app now displays a notice explaining that the album owner will provide iCloud storage for all new content added after the update.
Apple highlights several new benefits, including full-resolution photo and video sharing and the ability to send invitations through third-party apps such as messaging platforms. However, a less prominent notice confirms that all newly uploaded content will use storage from the creator’s iCloud account.
In practical terms, this removes one of the feature’s most attractive advantages. Users who maintained large shared collections without affecting their storage plans may now need to allocate part of their iCloud capacity to continue using the feature long term.
Another notable change is the increased reliance on iCloud Photos. Early beta testing suggests that creating new long-term shared albums now requires iCloud Photos to be enabled, a requirement that did not exist in previous versions of the operating system.
A free alternative remains available, but with limitations. iOS 27 allows users to create temporary shared albums that remain active for up to 30 days without consuming iCloud storage or requiring iCloud Photos. After that period, the content becomes unavailable unless participants save the files locally.
Apple has not officially explained the reasoning behind the change. Nevertheless, the update signals a major shift in the company’s cloud storage strategy and could impact millions of users who have relied on Shared Albums for years.