

If you are still over quota after that time, your account will be locked.You can view and download your files, but will not be able to add new files. After that period, your account will become read-only, but you will still have access to your files for at least 6 months.If you are an Office 365 consumer subscriber and have stored in excess of 1 TB, you will be notified of this change and will be able to keep your increased storage for at least 12 months starting on November 2, 2015.

If you are an Office 365 Home, Personal, or University subscriber with unlimited storage: If after 1 year you fail to take action, your content may be deleted.That means that you will not be able to access the content in your OneDrive until you take action. If after 9 months and you are still over quota, your account will be locked.However, you will not be able to add new content. If you are over quota after the 90 days, you will still have access to your files for 9 months.You will be notified and will have 90 days’ notice to take action before your account will become read-only.If you have a free OneDrive plan and will be over your storage quota as a result of these changes: Here’s what happens if you go over the quota The storage you have as part of other promotions is not affected by this change.Current customers only using OneDrive storage plans of 100 or 200 GB are not affected by these changes.The 15 GB camera roll storage bonus will also be discontinued.If you’re already in the 15GB plan, it will decrease to 5GB, when Microsoft rolls out the new changes in early 2016. Current and new users will only get 5GB of free OneDrive storage.
