I’ve found Messages in iCloud is using a lot more storage than it should be. I’m pretty sure this is a side effect of having to upload the same data from multiple devices and it not knowing they are the same.
The amount of storage for messages on my iPhone before I enabled Messages in iCloud was about 100 MB. I’d say it was similar on my iPad.
The amount of storage in iCloud after I enabled it on my IPhone was about 120 MB and after enabling it on my iPad, about 240 MB, despite the messages being the same for the most part. I’m guessing this was done because it didn’t know if the messages were the same for both devices or not.
The amount of iCloud storage Messages is using now is 270 MB, with 95 MB of that being conversations. I’m pretty sure that 95 MB includes media attachments since one conversation listed is 57 MB which is nearly impossible to get with just text alone. That leaves around 175 MB of unexplained iCloud storage usage. That appears to be duplicate data, which for some reason is being kept around in iCloud.
Unlike other iCloud services there’s no way of verifying if that space is accurate since the local device no longer reports Message or attachment sizes.
The amount of storage for messages on my iPhone before I enabled Messages in iCloud was about 100 MB. I’d say it was similar on my iPad.
The amount of storage in iCloud after I enabled it on my IPhone was about 120 MB and after enabling it on my iPad, about 240 MB, despite the messages being the same for the most part. I’m guessing this was done because it didn’t know if the messages were the same for both devices or not.
The amount of iCloud storage Messages is using now is 270 MB, with 95 MB of that being conversations. I’m pretty sure that 95 MB includes media attachments since one conversation listed is 57 MB which is nearly impossible to get with just text alone. That leaves around 175 MB of unexplained iCloud storage usage. That appears to be duplicate data, which for some reason is being kept around in iCloud.
Unlike other iCloud services there’s no way of verifying if that space is accurate since the local device no longer reports Message or attachment sizes.