For easier collaboration, you can move files and folders from My Drive to a shared drive on a computer if youâre logged into a work or school account. By default, you can only move files and folders you own.
- If your admin enables the setting to allow file editors to move files into a shared drive, you may move files on which youâre an Editor. For more information on this admin setting, go to Move your organization's content to a shared drive.
- You can only move a folder to a shared drive if youâre a manager of the shared drive.
Learn how file access changes
When you move content to a shared drive:
- Non-members of a shared drive could lose access to content moved into a shared drive.
- Only members of the shared drive and people with whom the file is directly shared can access the file.
- File permissions inherited from folders arenât copied.
- If you move a child folder to a shared drive, permissions inherited from the parent folder wonât be copied over.
- If you move a parent folder to a shared drive, the child folder will still inherit those permissions.
- If the original owner of a file is in your organization but not a member of the shared drive, they lose ownership, but can still access the file.
Understand limitations when you move files & folders
Here are some general problems you could find when you move files and folders from My Drive to a shared drive:
Move files owned by users outside of your organization
- You canât move folders or files external users own, even if the external user is a member of the destination shared drive.
- You canât move internally-owned subfolders that are part of an externally-owned folder.
Move Google Sites files to shared drives
- If the original owner of the site is in the same organization as the shared drive, the published site is still visible. For users with whom the site was previously shared, the Sites file related to the site is still accessible.
- If the original owner of the site is in a different organization than the shared drive, the published site is still visible. Even if it was previously shared with them, the associated file isnât accessible to people who arenât members of the shared drive.
Understand other limitations when you move Drive folders to shared drives
- Shortcuts are created for any items that canât be moved. If there are any items that canât be moved because of permission or access issues, when you move folders from My Drive to a shared drive, it creates a shortcut in the shared drive to preserve the current folder hierarchy. In order to do this, we enforce the following folder move limits:
- Folders can't be moved if there are either 25 unmovable items or if 10% of items are unmovable (the limit is the smaller of either 10% or 25 items per folder).
- The move can have no more than 100,000 items total.
- When shortcuts are created, the original items are relocated to the ownerâs My Drive folder.
- When you move a large number of folders into a shared drive that might exceed the limit, you could get a warning notice before you attempt to move.
Understand why pre-move dialog may not match pre-move download
- The number of moveable items in your pre-move dialogue may not match the number shown in your pre-move download because:
- The pre-move dialog counts items which you don't have access to, the pre-move download doesn't include these items.
- If a folder that contains other folders or items (a parent folder) is unmovable and there are more items within that parent folder that canât be moved, only the parent folder is listed. The items within that parent folder aren't counted toward the number of movable items.
Understand error codes
If you receive a notification that items canât be moved, youâll have an option to click Download item list (CSV). It'll prompt a download of a CSV file which includes a list of the items that canât be moved and the error code associated with each item. More information about each error code is listed below:
UNKNOWN_UNMOVABLE_REASON and OTHER