Google Workspace Free Tier 2026: What Small Businesses Need to Know
Google Workspace Free Tier 2026: What Small Businesses Need to Know Before Google Suspends Your Account
The Google Workspace free tier is gone for businesses. Google is now actively suspending accounts still using it for commercial purposes. If your business email runs through a custom domain on Google and you haven’t paid for a subscription, you may be one flag away from losing access to your Gmail, Drive, and Calendar. Here’s exactly what changed with the Google Workspace free tier in 2026 and what you need to do.
Google killed the free tier for commercial use in 2022 and has been stepping up enforcement through 2026. Any business using a free legacy account can be flagged and suspended without much warning. The cheapest paid option is Business Starter at $7/user/month on an annual plan: about the cost of one lunch per employee per month.
What Happened to the Google Workspace Free Tier
Google originally offered free custom-domain email through a product called Google Apps for Your Domain, launched in 2006. Many small businesses set up accounts back then and kept using them for free for over a decade. In 2022, Google announced it was ending the legacy free edition and required all commercial accounts to switch to a paid plan.
The enforcement wasn’t aggressive at first. Many accounts slipped through and kept running on the free tier. That changed in 2026. Google’s support documentation, updated April 10, 2026, states explicitly: if Google suspects a free-edition account is being used for commercial purposes, it will contact account administrators and direct them to switch to a paid plan, or suspend accounts that continue to use the free edition for commercial purposes.
The Hacker News community flagged a wave of these suspension notices in early April 2026. Users who had accounts since the Google Apps era (some for 15 to 20 years) are receiving enforcement emails with little time to respond.
Business email at your domain (you@yourbusiness.com) requires a paid plan. Free Gmail only works with @gmail.com addresses.
All paid plans now include Gemini AI tools. This is what drove the 40% price increase in early 2025. You pay for it whether you use it or not.
Google is actively flagging accounts. A suspension means losing access to Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and Meet at your custom domain simultaneously.
Accredited schools keep free access. Nonprofits can apply for discounted plans. Everyone else pays.
Google Workspace Paid Plans: What the Google Workspace Free Tier Costs Now
Google raised prices across all plans in January 2025, bundling Gemini AI features that previously cost $20 to $30 per user per month as add-ons. The increases were substantial across every tier. Here’s what each plan costs in 2026, billed annually:
- 30 GB pooled storage/user
- Custom business email
- 100-person video meetings
- Gemini AI in Gmail
- Basic security controls
- 2 TB pooled storage/user
- 150-person video meetings
- Meeting recordings
- Full Gemini AI suite
- Shared drives
- 5 TB pooled storage/user
- 500-person video meetings
- eDiscovery and Vault
- Attendance tracking
- Advanced endpoint management
For most small businesses (restaurants, salons, and retail shops with 2 to 10 employees), Business Starter at $7/user/month is sufficient. The 30 GB storage per user is tight if you store a lot of large files in Drive, but for email, Docs, and Sheets it handles everyday work fine. Business Standard makes more sense if your team shares large files regularly or needs recorded video meetings.
โ Reasons to Pay and Stay on Google Workspace
- Your team already knows Gmail, Docs, and Sheets
- Real-time collaboration on documents is the best in class
- Gemini AI is now included: useful for drafting emails and summarizing docs
- 14-day free trial on all paid plans before committing
- Annual billing saves 16% over month-to-month
โ Real Drawbacks to Consider
- 40% price jump since 2025: you’re paying for Gemini whether you use it or not
- No shared mailboxes: every email address (info@, sales@) requires a paid user license
- Storage limits on Starter are tight for businesses using Drive heavily
- Microsoft 365 Business Basic ($6/user/mo) is now cheaper for comparable features
- Month-to-month billing is 20% more expensive than annual
How to Check If Your Google Workspace Account Is at Risk
If you set up your business email through Google before 2022 and never received a billing notice or paid invoice from Google, you are likely still on the legacy free edition. Log in to your Google Admin console at admin.google.com and check the Billing section. If it shows no active subscription or a “Free” edition, your account is at risk of suspension.
๐ How to Transition to a Paid Plan Before Google Suspends You
Go to admin.google.com and sign in with your admin account (the one that manages your domain’s Google services).
In the left menu, click Billing, then Get more services or Buy or upgrade depending on your admin console version.
Select Google Workspace Business Starter (or Standard if you need more storage). Choose Annual Plan for the lower monthly rate.
Review the user count. You only need licenses for accounts that send and receive email. For generic addresses like info@ or support@, use Google Groups as a free Collaborative Inbox instead of paying for a separate license.
Enter billing info and complete checkout. Your existing email, Drive files, and calendar data carry over automatically.
Before paying for user licenses, go to Admin Console โ Directory โ Users and check for inactive accounts. Any former employee whose account is still active counts as a billable user. Delete or suspend inactive accounts first to reduce your monthly cost before adding a payment method.
A three-person accounting firm in Doral reached out after getting one of these Google suspension notices. They had been using the same free G Suite account since 2009 (17 years) and had no idea it was operating outside policy. They panicked thinking all their files were gone. Nothing was deleted. Google suspends access, not data. We logged into the Admin Console, removed two inactive accounts from former employees, and upgraded the remaining three users to Business Starter. Total cost: $21 a month. The whole transition took about 20 minutes.
โ Carlos Mendoza, Network Engineer ยท Miami, FLWho Needs to Act on This
The Google Workspace free tier is not coming back. If you’re still running on a legacy free account, the risk of a suspension notice is real and the window to act on your own terms is shrinking. Upgrading to Business Starter takes less than 30 minutes and costs less than most business utility bills. If you’re weighing alternatives, compare it against our full breakdown of Google Drive vs OneDrive vs Dropbox to see which storage ecosystem actually fits your workflow. Check our guide on what Microsoft 365 includes for small business if you’re considering making the switch.
Still Using Free Google Workspace?
Don’t wait for the suspension email. Check your billing status at admin.google.com today and upgrade before Google makes the decision for you.
See Google Workspace Plans โ