Comparisons

Fabric vs. Dropbox

File storage vs a workspace that understands your files

Last updated April 2026

Dropbox stores files and syncs them across devices. Fabric stores files and learns from them. If you need a folder in the cloud, Dropbox does that. If you want an AI workspace that gets smarter and more useful the more you save, that's Fabric.


Comparison table


Fabric

Dropbox

Pricing

See plans

Free (2GB), Plus $11.99/mo (2TB), Professional $19.99/mo (3TB), Business $18-30/user/mo

AI

Built-in AI assistant across multiple models, contextual to your entire library. Can create/edit documents, make tasks, organize and more.

Dropbox Dash (AI-powered search across connected tools). No AI assistant on your content

Content understanding

Automatic extraction, enrichment, and relationship mapping of all saved content

Files are stored. Contents aren't extracted, indexed, or understood

Search

Semantic, visual, colour, inside-document, inside-video, cross-platform

File name and metadata search. Dash searches across connected tools. No semantic or visual search

Notes & documents

Full markdown editor, real-time co-editing, version history

Dropbox Paper (limited development). No native note-taking

Organisation

Spaces, folders, tags, kanban, grid/list/detail views, shared drives

Folders. Starred files. Recent files. That's about it

Collaboration

Real-time co-editing, annotations on any media, comments, chat, shared drives

File sharing with permissions, comments on files, Dropbox Replay for video review

Publishing

One-click publish with analytics, password protection, stakeholder links

Shared links with password protection and expiry (Professional+). No analytics on who viewed content

Canvas

Spatial canvas for visual thinking, real-time multiplayer

None

Tasks

Tasks with priority, due dates, reminders, linked to files

None

File sync

Cloud-based with desktop folder sync

Best-in-class file sync across devices. Smart Sync for selective local storage

Storage

[Fabric storage details]

2GB free, 2-3TB personal, 9TB-unlimited business

Integrations

MCP, API, CLI, Zapier, Google Drive, Notion, Dropbox, GitHub, Raycast

Slack, Zoom, Asana, Trello, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Salesforce, and more

Platforms

Web, iOS, Android, desktop, Chrome extension

Web, iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, Linux


What is Dropbox?

Dropbox is a cloud storage and file sync service. You put files in a folder. They sync across your devices. You can share them with other people. It's been doing this since 2007 and it does it reliably. Over the years Dropbox has added features like Capture (screen recording), Sign (e-signatures), Replay (video review), and Dash (AI-powered search across connected tools). But at its core, Dropbox is a place where files sit. It doesn't know what's inside them.


What is Fabric?

Fabric is an AI workspace that combines file storage, note-taking, search, tasks, collaboration, and publishing.

The Fabric Memory Engine automatically extracts, enriches, and maps relationships between everything you save. Where Dropbox stores a PDF, Fabric reads it, indexes it to the page, makes it searchable by meaning, and lets you ask the AI questions about it. Same file, different experience.


Key differences

Storage vs learning from them

Dropbox stores files. You upload a PDF, it sits in a folder. You upload a video, it sits in a folder. You can share them, sync them, and organise them into subfolders. But Dropbox doesn't know what's in those files. It can't search inside a PDF, can't find a moment in a video, can't tell you how two documents relate to each other. A thousand files in Dropbox is just a thousand files.

Fabric learns from your files. Every file you save is automatically extracted, enriched, and indexed. The AI maps relationships between your content. A PDF is searchable to the page. A video is searchable to the timestamp. An image is findable by visual similarity. You can ask the AI questions that span your entire library. The more you save, the more useful Fabric becomes. Dropbox doesn't work that way.

Search

Dropbox searches by file name, metadata, and recently, through Dash, across connected tools like Slack and Google Workspace. Dash is a step forward, but it's searching across apps, not inside your files. If you can't remember the file name, Dropbox struggles.

Fabric searches by meaning. Semantic search finds content even when you describe it differently from how it was written. Visual search finds similar images. Colour search finds assets by palette. In-document search goes to the page, slide, or timestamp. Cross-platform search pulls results from Google Drive, Notion, and Dropbox itself alongside your Fabric library. You can connect Dropbox to Fabric and search it more effectively than Dropbox's own search allows.

AI

Dropbox Dash is AI-powered search across your connected tools. It's useful for finding files scattered across services. But there's no AI assistant that understands the contents of your files, answers questions about them, or summarises them.

Fabric's AI assistant works across your entire content library. It answers questions, summarises documents, transcribes audio and video, generates meeting recaps, and takes actions inside the app. Multiple models, available at every tier.

Notes and documents

Dropbox isn't a writing tool. Dropbox Paper exists but has received limited development attention. There's no native markdown editor, no real-time co-editing on documents (outside of Paper), no version history on written content.

Fabric has a full markdown editor with real-time collaborative editing, version history, embedded file references, and smart meeting notes. If you need to write alongside your files, Fabric handles that. Dropbox expects you to open the file in another app.

Organisation

Dropbox organises with folders. You can star files and view recent items. That's the system. It works for traditional file hierarchies. It doesn't support tags, kanban views, spatial canvases, or multiple view modes.

Fabric organises through Spaces, folders, tags, and multiple views including kanban, grid, list, and detail. The spatial canvas lets you place content freely for visual thinking and moodboarding. If your organisational needs go beyond nested folders, Fabric offers more structure.

Collaboration

Dropbox handles file sharing well. Permissions, password-protected links, expiry dates, comments on files. Replay is useful for video review with timestamped feedback. For file-centric collaboration, Dropbox covers the basics.

Fabric goes further. Real-time co-editing on documents and canvases, threaded comments, pinned annotations on any content type (not just video), in-context chat, and shared drives. If your collaboration involves working inside content rather than just sharing files back and forth, Fabric has the tools.

Publishing

Dropbox lets you share files and folders via links. Professional and above add password protection and expiry dates. There's no way to publish content as a polished deliverable, and no analytics on who viewed your shared links or how long they spent.

Fabric lets you publish or share anything with one click. Built-in analytics show who viewed your content, when, and for how long. Password protection. Dedicated stakeholder links. If you share work with clients, investors, or the public, Fabric gives you visibility Dropbox doesn't.

File sync

Dropbox's file sync is its original strength and remains reliable. Smart Sync lets you see all your files without storing them all locally. Selective Sync lets you choose what lives on each device. For raw file synchronisation across devices, Dropbox is proven technology.

Fabric is cloud-based with desktop folder sync. It handles sync well, but if your primary need is keeping a large local file system perfectly mirrored across multiple devices, Dropbox's sync engine is more mature for that specific job.

Pricing

Dropbox's free tier is 2GB, which is almost unusable in 2026. Paid plans start at $11.99/month for 2TB. Business plans start at $18/user/month. For pure file storage, this is competitive. For everything else, you're paying for storage you could get cheaper from Google or Microsoft, plus features you may not need.

Fabric is a different product at a different price point. [Insert Fabric pricing details.] You're paying for AI, content understanding, search, collaboration, publishing, and notes, not just storage.


When to use each

Use Fabric if you want to do more with your files than store them. You want AI that understands what's inside your documents, images, and recordings. You need semantic search across everything you've saved. You want to write notes alongside your files, collaborate inside content, publish with analytics, or organise with kanban views and spatial canvases. Fabric treats files as content to work with, not just objects to sync.

Use Dropbox if your primary need is reliable file sync across devices with a large storage quota. You work with teams that need shared folders with permission controls. You use Dropbox-specific features like Sign, Replay, or Capture. And you already have separate tools for notes, AI, search, and collaboration, and you're happy keeping them separate.

Use both. Fabric connects to Dropbox. You can keep your files in Dropbox and search across them from Fabric alongside your other content. Fabric's semantic search works on your Dropbox files. Some teams use Dropbox as the storage layer and Fabric as the intelligence layer on top.


Why people move from Dropbox to Fabric

They wanted to find things. Dropbox's search finds files by name. When you have thousands of files and can't remember what you called something, that stops working. Fabric's semantic search finds content by meaning, across all file types.

They wanted AI on their files. Storing a PDF is one thing. Asking the AI "what does this contract say about liability?" is another. Fabric understands file contents. Dropbox doesn't.

They wanted to consolidate. Dropbox for files, Google Docs for writing, Notion for notes, ChatGPT for AI. Fabric brings file storage, notes, AI, search, and publishing into one place.

They wanted publishing. Sharing a Dropbox link doesn't tell you who opened it or how long they spent. Fabric's publishing with analytics matters for anyone sharing deliverables externally.


FAQs

Can I connect Dropbox to Fabric?

Yes. Fabric integrates with Dropbox. You can search across your Dropbox files from Fabric alongside everything else in your library.


Does Fabric replace Dropbox?

It can, depending on your needs. If you need massive raw storage quotas and best-in-class file sync, Dropbox is purpose-built for that. If you need storage plus AI, search, notes, collaboration, and publishing, Fabric covers all of that in one product.


Is Fabric free?

Fabric has a free tier with limited storage and AI.


Does Dropbox have AI?

Dropbox Dash provides AI-powered search across your connected tools. There's no AI assistant that reads, understands, or answers questions about the contents of your files.


Which has more storage?

Dropbox offers up to 3TB on personal plans and unlimited on business plans. Fabric's storage tiers are different, with up 2TB for individuals, and much more for teams. If raw storage volume is the deciding factor, compare the specific plans.


Can I use Fabric for file sync like Dropbox?

Fabric's desktop app supports local folder sync. For straightforward device-to-device file mirroring at large scale, Dropbox's sync engine has more years behind it. For most users, Fabric's sync handles everyday needs without issue.

Compare similar apps and tools:

Evaluating other options? See more comparisons:

The workspace that thinks with you.
Ready when you are.

The workspace that thinks with you.

Ready when you are.

The workspace that thinks with you.

Ready when you are.