SugarSync was one of the early cloud storage services to get folder syncing right — letting you sync any folder across your devices rather than forcing everything into a single sync folder. Years later it still runs as a paid service. This 2026 review covers what SugarSync does well, where it falls short, and the alternatives worth considering — including self-hosting, where you keep control of the data and the bill.
What SugarSync gets right
- Sync any folder — keep existing folder structures in place and sync them as-is across computers and mobile.
- Password-protected sharing — share files and folders with access controls.
- File versioning & archive — recover previous versions and keep archived copies.
- Remote wipe & solid mobile apps — useful for laptops and phones that may be lost.
Where SugarSync falls short in 2026
- Price — paid-only with no meaningful free tier, and per-GB cost is high next to modern rivals.
- Dated experience — the interface and ecosystem feel behind newer competitors.
- You don't hold the keys — like any managed provider, SugarSync controls your data, the retention policy, and can suspend or discontinue the account.
SugarSync alternatives compared
| Alternative | Best for | Free tier | Data control |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dropbox | Sync reliability, teams | Small | Provider |
| Google Drive | Office integration | 15 GB | Provider |
| Sync.com / Proton Drive | Zero-knowledge privacy | Small | Provider (encrypted) |
| pCloud | Lifetime plans, media | Up to 10 GB | Provider |
| Nextcloud (self-hosted) | Full control, no per-GB fee | N/A (your server) | You |
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The self-hosted alternative: own your sync
If what drew you to SugarSync was flexible syncing and control, self-hosting takes that further. Nextcloud syncs any folder, offers sharing, versioning and mobile apps, and runs entirely on hardware you control — no per-GB bill, no third party able to purge or lock your files. Deploy it in minutes with our Nextcloud server solution.
For the storage itself, capacity-per-dollar wins at volume: storage dedicated servers and HDD dedicated servers host large libraries cheaply, while a private cloud on your own dedicated server gives a managed-feeling environment with full data ownership.
Verdict
SugarSync remains a competent folder-sync service, but its pricing and dated feel make it hard to recommend over modern rivals. Choose Dropbox or Google Drive for convenience, Proton Drive or Sync.com for privacy — or, if you want to stop renting storage and own it outright, self-host Nextcloud on a storage server.
Frequently asked questions
Is SugarSync still available in 2026?
Yes, SugarSync continues to operate as a paid subscription service, though it no longer offers a meaningful free tier.
What is the best SugarSync alternative?
For convenience, Dropbox or Google Drive; for privacy, Proton Drive or Sync.com; for full control and no per-GB fees, self-hosted Nextcloud on your own server.
Is self-hosting cheaper than SugarSync at scale?
Usually yes. A fixed monthly storage-server price beats rising per-GB subscription costs once you store hundreds of gigabytes or more.