Mover vs. MultCloud.
Pay-per-migration. No caps.
Comparison · MultCloud
MultCloud is a web tool for moving files between cloud accounts. It's easy to use, has a free tier, and serves a lot of individual and small-team users well. Mover is built for business migrations — runs on the same engine that powers Files.com, the #1-ranked MFT vendor in Gartner Peer Insights, with 4,000+ organizations using it daily. Pay per migration, get an audit trail, no bandwidth tiers.
Pay per migration, not per month.
MultCloud uses tiered subscription pricing with monthly data traffic caps per tier. Move more than your tier allows and the migration stalls or you upgrade. Subscription renews monthly or annually whether you're using it or not.
Mover's prepaid packs are one-time: $99, $199, $799, $1,499 at the 400 GB, 1 TB, 5 TB, 10 TB packs. What you don't use stays on your balance. There is no subscription to start and no subscription to cancel.
No tier-based throttle on throughput.
MultCloud's lower tiers come with bandwidth caps — the migration runs at a lower speed and takes longer. Higher tiers unlock faster transfers but the throttle is a real constraint. A multi-terabyte migration on a low tier can run for weeks.
Mover does not throttle by tier. Throughput is determined by source and destination provider rate limits, network bandwidth, and Mover's parallelism. You're waiting on physics, not on a pricing decision.
A dollar estimate up front. A compliance log when it ends.
MultCloud's pricing depends on which tier you pick — and picking right requires estimating your monthly traffic, which most teams haven't had to do. Mover's free dry-run returns the exact dollar amount before any data moves: Mover pack price plus provider egress fees, line-itemized.
Every object operation in a Mover migration is logged with timestamp, source / destination key, status, and bytes transferred. Exportable as CSV or JSON. Drop it into a compliance audit folder and move on. SOC 2 Type II reporting, HIPAA BAA available, GDPR DPA available.
The differences that matter
Why customers pick Mover for business migrations.
MultCloud serves its users well on the workloads it's optimized for. The arguments below are where the model and the surface area run out of room.
Pay-per-migration, not pay-per-month.
MultCloud uses tiered subscription pricing with monthly data traffic caps per tier. Mover's prepaid packs are one-time — $99 / $199 / $799 / $1,499 for the 400 GB / 1 TB / 5 TB / 10 TB packs. No subscription, no monthly cap, no recurring bill after the migration ends.
No bandwidth tier throttle.
MultCloud's lower tiers come with bandwidth caps — the migration runs at a lower speed and takes longer. Mover does not throttle by tier. Throughput is determined by source and destination provider rate limits, network bandwidth, and Mover's parallelism. You're waiting on physics, not on a pricing decision.
A dollar estimate before you commit.
MultCloud's pricing depends on which tier you pick — and picking right requires estimating your monthly traffic. Mover's free dry-run returns the exact dollar amount before any data moves: Mover pack price plus provider egress fees, line-itemized.
Audit trail built for compliance.
MultCloud doesn't publish SOC 2 Type II reporting, a HIPAA BAA, or a GDPR DPA for migrations. Mover ships with SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA available, GDPR DPA available, and a per-object audit log exportable as CSV or JSON.
Enterprise OAuth fits.
Many enterprise Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 tenants have restricted-app policies that block consumer-leaning OAuth integrations. This is a common reason teams move off MultCloud onto Mover when the migration is for a managed enterprise tenant.
Vendor credibility.
Mover runs on the same engine as Files.com, the #1-ranked MFT vendor in Gartner Peer Insights and the #1-scoring vendor in every attribute on G2 for Managed File Transfer. 4,000+ organizations use that engine in production every day — Boeing, Toyota, Adobe, and Mount Sinai among them.
The honest comparison
What each does that the other doesn't.
Real trade-offs in both directions. If you're juggling personal cloud accounts on a free tier, MultCloud is the right tool. For business migrations or anything compliance-bound, Mover.
A true free tier.
MultCloud has a free plan with a real monthly data allowance — small, but real. For an individual moving a few gigabytes between personal cloud accounts, that's a better starting price than Mover, where the smallest pack is $99 for 400 GB. If your migration fits inside the MultCloud free allowance, MultCloud is the right tool and there's nothing more to say.
A web UI built for non-technical users.
MultCloud's interface is designed for someone who has a Dropbox account and a OneDrive account and wants to move files between them without thinking about IAM, OAuth scopes, or migration patterns. It's straightforward in a way Mover isn't trying to be.
Many personal cloud accounts in one dashboard.
MultCloud is built around the "I have 30 cloud accounts and want to manage them in one place" use case — Cloud Sync, Cloud Transfer, Cloud Backup, and direct file management across them. For a power user juggling personal cloud accounts, that's a real feature surface Mover doesn't try to compete with.
Pay-per-migration with no subscription.
One-time prepaid pack purchase, no monthly bill after the migration ends. What you don't use stays on your balance.
No bandwidth tier throttle.
Throughput is limited by network and provider rate limits, not by which tier you bought. MultCloud's lower tiers throttle by design; Mover doesn't.
Compliance evidence out of the box.
SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA available, GDPR DPA available. Per-object exportable audit log. For any migration that has to clear procurement or compliance review, the paperwork is ready.
Enterprise OAuth that actually works.
Restricted-app policies on managed Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 tenants block consumer-leaning OAuth flows that MultCloud uses. Mover is registered as a tenant-eligible app.
Provider-specific quirk handling at scale.
S3 multipart resume from the last completed part, Google Drive duplicate-name handling, SharePoint long paths, S3 Object Ownership detection. The edges that show up on multi-terabyte business migrations.
Common Questions
Mover vs. MultCloud, answered.
The dry run is free, every time. Run one to verify the comparison yourself before you commit a single byte.
There's a free tier with a small monthly data cap. For an individual moving a few gigabytes between personal cloud accounts, the free tier is a real option. Larger migrations require a paid tier, which is subscription-based with its own monthly cap.
Don't take our word for it. Run the dry run.
Connect both sides, run a free dry-run, see what Mover would charge for your migration in dollars. If MultCloud's free tier covers your scope, you'll know. If your migration is bigger than that, you'll have a real comparison number in hand.


