Eliminate annoyances and say sayonara to storage struggles with these easy-to-implement, expert-approved solutions.
Ah, the cloud. It sounds so light, so fluffy, so worry-free โ doesnโt it?
Here in the real world, though, cloud services arenโt always so simple. With Google Drive, specifically, whether youโre storing and managing multimedia assets or dealing with documents and spreadsheets, thereโs a decent chance youโll run into some manner of murkiness along the way.
Drive does lots of things well, but it certainly has its share of, shall we say, quirks. Iโve heard it all over the years โ and now, Iโve put together a collection of some of the most common Drive challenges Iโve encountered along with some fast โnโ simple solutions to overcome โem.
Read through these fixes, hang onto any that seem relevant for future reference, and get ready to watch your cloud-related worries float away.
Google Drive problem #1: Difficult downloads
For something thatโs primarily a storage service, youโd think the basic act of, yโknow, transferring files with Drive would be effortless. Unfortunately, though, Drive is somewhat notorious for making downloads a massive pain in the patootie โ at least, when more than one file is involved.
When you select multiple files on the Drive website and then try to download โem all simultaneously, the site begins to package the files into a compressed zip archive โ and then, all too often, takes an eternity to finish that process and start your actual download. Itโs a frequently frustrating experience and the last thing you want to deal with when youโre just trying to save some stuff and move on.
Thereโs not much you can do about the process itself, but you can avoid the website entirely and transfer files in a simpler, faster, and more reliable manner. Youโve got a few different options, all of which put the Drive website method to shame.
First, if youโre using ChromeOS, the function you need is built right into your Chromebook: Just open up the system Files app, find the Google Drive section in the left-hand menu, and drag and drop any folders or files between there and your local storage.

The ChromeOS Files app has native Drive integration for easy file transfers.
JR Raphael / Foundry
On a Windows or Mac computer, grab Googleโs official Google Drive desktop program. You can then choose either to mirror your entire Drive storage on the local device โ meaning anything in Drive is always synced and available directly on the computerโs own storage, and any changes or additions made on the computer will instantly be reflected in Drive as well โ or to โstreamโ files, as Google describes it, and make every file from Drive accessible on the computer but only actually synced and downloaded when you actively open it.

Googleโs official Drive desktop app has two easy options for moving files back and forth between Drive and a Windows or Mac computer.
JR Raphael / Foundry
Either way, youโll end up with a folder on your computer that basically becomes a place to see and access everything in your Google Drive storage. Anything you save to it or drag to it will automatically get uploaded to Drive, and the local folder and the Drive folder will always be identical in what they show (whether the files are fully downloaded and available locally, with mirroring, or simply available on demand via the streaming approach).
And finally, if you want to get really geeky, you can actually use an FTP program to sign into your Drive account and then drag and drop things directly between it and your computer without any annoying interfaces or unnecessary time-wasters. If that sounds too complicated or confusing for you, then itโs probably not something you need. But if you use FTP in other parts of your life and find the possibility alluring, the specific program youโll want to grab to make it happen is a free and open-source FTP client called Cyberduck. Itโs available for both Windows and Mac (and thereโs really no need for it on ChromeOS, since the same basic capability is built directly into the system file manager on that platform).
Once youโve installed the program, click the Open Connection button, select โGoogle Driveโ from the dropdown menu at the top of the connection box, then click Connect. A page will pop up in your browser prompting you to allow the app access to your Drive storage, after which youโll be given a special code that youโll need to copy and paste back into a prompt thatโll be waiting for you in the app.
After youโve done that, youโll have a file-system-like view of your Drive storage right in front of you โ and you can drag and drop anything from your computer into it or anything from it into a local computer folder.

Cyberduck lets you access your entire Drive storage via FTP on your computer.
JR Raphael / Foundry
As an extra-geeky bonus, Cyberduck can do the same thing with Dropbox and OneDrive as well, in case you have any need to connect to either of those services.
Google Drive problem #2: Office awfulness
I donโt know about you, but I tend to get a whole lot of Word files sent my way. And since I long ago sent Microsoftโs Office apps a-packinโ and switched over to Google Docs for all of my own writing, I usually end up dragging those files into the Drive website to open โem and do whateverโs needed within my preferred environment.
For years, Drive relied on a Chrome-connected system called Office Compatibility Mode to make that possible. Itโs a stripped-down interface where you can view and perform basic edits on Office files but where most advanced word processing features โ including commenting โ are missing in action. And quite honestly, itโs kind of irritating to use.
Thereโs actually a much better option, though โ one youโd probably never know existed if youโve been using Drive for long enough to have that Compatibility Mode system in place. So here it is: Since mid-2019, Drive has supported native Microsoft Office file editing within the standard, fully featured Google Docs interface and without any conversions or stripped-down setups required.
If youโre still seeing that old Compatibility Mode when dragging Office files into the Drive website, all youโve gotta do is remove the Office Editing extension from your browser โ by opening its Chrome Web Store page and clicking the Remove from Chrome button (which will be present if the extension is installed) โ and then refresh the Drive website, if you already had it open.
The next time you drag an Office file into the site, Drive will automatically open it in an editor that looks and works exactly like the regular Docs editor, only with a blue โ.DOCXโ chip next to the fileโs name to let you know youโre using the Word format. (Just note that somewhat confusingly, you need to drag the file into the Drive website, not upload to the Docs website, for this to work.)

Working with Office files in Drive is a delight โ once you get everything set up correctly.
JR Raphael / Foundry
The file will remain in its original format throughout any edits you make. If you need to export it to send it back to someone after editing, you can always download or share it from Drive or directly from the Docs editing interface. (And while weโre been talking about documents specifically here, by the way, all of this same stuff applies to Excel and PowerPoint files as well.)
Just one last thing to check: Drive has an option within its settings (which you can find by clicking the gear-shaped icon in the Drive siteโs upper-right corner and then selecting โ yep, you guessed it โ โSettingsโ) thatโll automatically convert all uploaded documents into the Docs editing format. That typically isnโt enabled by default, but if you want to make sure any Word files remain in the Word format, as described above, you might want to take a quick peek and confirm that that option is indeed deactivated on your account.
Google Drive problem #3: Conversion challenges
Speaking of file formats, have you ever found yourself staring at a file in your Drive and wishing you had a way to turn it into some other type of file? Whether itโs a document you need to transform into a PDF, a PNG you need to morph into a JPG, or a WAV you want saved as an MP3, moving from one manner of file to another is a delicate and often difficult dance.
It doesnโt have to be, though. First of all, if the conversion you need revolves around any manner of standard text file โ PDF, RTF, DOCX, TXT, or even HTML or EPUB โ you can actually handle your transformation directly within Docs. Just open the file into Docs (either by double-clicking it within Drive, if it already has the Docs icon next to it and is set to open there by default, or by right-clicking it and then selecting โOpen withโ followed by โGoogle Docsโ if not).
From there, if the file is a PDF, itโll automatically get converted into a plain-text document on the spot. If itโs any other type of file, you can click โFileโ followed by โDownloadโ to find options for saving it into an alternate format.

You can convert documents into lots of other file types directly within the Google Docs editor.
JR Raphael / Foundry
But what if youโre dealing with something beyond a basic text file? The answer there lies within an ultra-handy Google Drive add-on called CloudConvert. Open up the add-onโs page within the Google Workspace Marketplace, click the button to install it, and follow the steps to add it into your account.
Youโll see some warnings about the level of access youโll be granting the service, but donโt fret: First of all, CloudConvert will have access only to the Drive files that you explicitly send to it or create with it, not to your entire Drive storage โ and second, the companyโs privacy policy makes it clear that it never reads or collects data from uploaded files or does anything shady with your info. (The company makes its money by selling subscriptions, but unless you anticipate doing more than 10 file conversions a day, you wonโt have to pay to use it.)
After youโve got that added, you can right-click on any file within Drive and then select โOpen withโ followed by โCloudConvertโ to select a new format and begin a conversion. The resulting file will be saved back into your Drive storage as soon as itโs finished.
Google Drive problem #4: Short-term sharing struggles
Sharing is caring, but when it comes to sensitive files, you might not always want everything you share to remain eternally available to its recipient. And traditionally, that means itโs up to you to remember to go back a few days or weeks later and revisit a fileโs sharing status.
If youโre in a paid Google Workspace arrangement, though โ through your company or organization โ thereโs now a better way. First, right-click on a file and select the โShareโ option on the Drive website (or use the Ctrl-Alt-A [or Cmd-Alt-A, on a Mac] keyboard shortcut to get to that same area). Then, type in the name or email address of the person with whom you want to share and click the box next to that โ the one that probably says โEditorโ by default.
There, you should see an option to โAdd expiration.โ Click that, and you can then set a specific date and time at which the personโs access will automatically expire. Hoorah!

File sharing, with built-in expiration โ hey, weโll take it.
JR Raphael / Foundry
You can select any date within the span of one year. The person youโre sharing with could always save the file themselves โ outside of Drive โ or capture screenshots, of course, but youโll be able to rest easy knowing your actual direct share and the direct access in your storage wonโt stick around forever.
Google Drive problem #5: Mobile syncing
The Drive syncing systems we talked about a minute ago are great on the desktop front โ but when youโre using Drive from your phone, youโre much more limited in options.
Sure, you can use the Drive appโs built-in โMake available offlineโ function โ which you can find by tapping the three-dot menu icon alongside any individual file โ if you need to keep specific Drive files accessible on your device even when you arenโt online. If you want to actually sync entire folders in either direction, though, or have any files available for use outside of Drive itself, the official app wonโt be of any help.
On Android, an app called Autosync for Google Drive will fill that void. Itโs among my picks for the best Android file transfer tools around, in fact, and for good reason: The app makes it as easy as can be to create pairs of folders that are continuously synced between your Drive storage and your phone โ in both directions, in just one direction, or even in an upload-and-then-delete sort of arrangement. You just pick out the local folder and the Drive folder you want to use, select the appropriate parameters, and then sit back and let the app do its work silently in the background over time.

Autosync lets you keep folders synced between Drive and your Android device.
JR Raphael / Foundry
Autosync is free to use for a single folder pairing and with files that are 10MB or smaller. You can remove those restrictions and unlock other advanced features with a one-time $5 in-app payment.
Google Drive problem #6: Suggestion overload
Driveโs โHomeโ view โ that welcome page that recently started showing up by default when you first open the site, with allegedly intelligent suggestions for which specific files and folders you might want to access โ is supposed to make it faster for you to find what you need. If it feels more like an annoying intrusion than a helpful resource for you, though, take note: You can pretty easily avoid it.
Itโll take you all of 10 seconds to do: Click the gear-shaped icon in the upper-right corner of the Drive website, select โSettings,โ then change the option for โStart pageโ from โHomeโ to โMy Drive.โ
And thatโs it: The next time you open up the Drive website, youโll go straight to the standard view of all of your folders and files โ no saucy suggestions showing up and stealing your time first.
Google Drive problem #7: Density difficulty
Looking at a long list of files and finding yourself miffed by the fact that you canโt see more stuff at once? Driveโs default desktop view isnโt exactly space-efficient โ but, well, you guessed it: Thereโs a fast โnโ simple fix.
First, change the file view from the โgridโ option to the far more info-dense โlistโ setup by clicking the icon that looks like three horizontal lines in the Drive websiteโs upper-right corner โ right next to the icon that looks like four small boxes in a grid. (You can also hit Alt-V and then L, if youโd rather go the keyboard shortcut route.) In the mobile app, youโll tap a single icon with three horizontal lines in that same area, provided youโre still in the default grid view.
If you want to see even more files yet, on the web, you can click the gear-shaped icon in Driveโs upper-right corner and select โSettingsโ โ then change the option for โDensityโ from โComfortableโ to โCompact.โ Thatโll eliminate a bunch of the white space built into Drive by default and let you see much more info at a time on whatever size screen youโre using.
Google Drive problem #8: The buried file blues
We all have those perpetually important files โ documents, images, and other resource-like items we pull up all the time. And always having to search for said VIP files to find โem isnโt exactly fun or productive.
Drive doesnโt have any way to pin files to the top of a list, but it does have some helpful tools for treating certain items as high priority and making โem especially easy to find and access. First, you can star any file (or even an entire folder) by hovering your mouse over its line and clicking the star outline that appears along its rightmost edge, on the Drive website โ or by using the Ctrl-Alt-S (or Cmd-Alt-S, on a Mac) keyboard shortcut. In the Drive mobile app, youโll tap the three-dot menu icon alongside the item and then select the โAdd to starredโ option in the menu that pops up.
However you go about doing it, that action will cause the item in question to appear in a special starred section that you can then get to by clicking the โStarredโ option in the main left-of-screen menu or by bookmarking this direct link for the desktop โ or by tapping the โStarredโ tab within the main bottom-of-screen menu in the Drive mobile app.
You can also create your own custom shortcuts for files or folders so that they effectively appear in multiple places โ if, say, you have an important item thatโs buried a few folders deep in your Drive and want it to be more easily accessible. By creating a shortcut for it, you could make it available from the main โMy Driveโ list while technically still leaving it in its properly organized home. Just right-click on any file or folder and select โOrganizeโ and then โAdd shortcutโ to get started with that from a computer โ or use the Ctrl-Alt-R (or Cmd-Alt-R, on a Mac) keyboard shortcut. You can tap that three-dot menu icon next to any item to find the same option on mobile.
If youโre using Android, you can also add a direct shortcut to any file or folder right onto your phoneโs home screen for one-touch access without even having to open the app. Tap the three-dot menu icon alongside the item you want, then scroll down and look for the โAdd to Home screenโ option to give it a whirl.
Whew โ that pesky olโ cloud is sure starting to feel a heck of lot lighter, isnโt it?
This article was originally published in December 2020 and most recently updated in August 2025.




