You want to create a link where people can send you files — like Dropbox File Request, but for Google Drive. You search "file request link Google Drive" and discover that Google Drive doesn't actually have this feature.

Dropbox has File Requests. OneDrive has File Requests. Google Drive? Nothing.

There are workarounds, but each has trade-offs. Here's what actually works and what's simpler.

Workaround 1: Shared folder with upload permissions

How it works: Create a folder in Google Drive, right-click → Share → change to "Anyone with the link" → set role to "Contributor."

The problem: - Uploaders must have a Google account and be signed in. If your client uses Outlook or doesn't have Gmail — they can't upload. - Contributors can see other people's files, not just add their own. - Contributors can also delete or modify files — not just upload. - There's no notification when someone uploads. You have to check manually. - The folder stays open forever unless you manually change permissions. - 30 people uploading into one flat folder = chaos.

When it works: Internal teams where everyone has Google Workspace. Not great for external people.

Workaround 2: Google Forms with file upload

How it works: Create a Google Form, add a "File upload" question type, share the form link.

The problem: - Uploaders must sign into a Google account — same dealbreaker as above. - Maximum 10 files per form submission. - Maximum 10 GB total per form (all respondents combined). - Files count against YOUR Google Drive storage. - The upload interface is clunky — it's a form field, not a drag-and-drop zone. - No progress bar for large files, no resume on failed uploads.

When it works: Schools and organizations where everyone already uses Google accounts. Small-scale collection with few files.

Workaround 3: Third-party tools with Google Drive integration

Tools like DriveUploader or FileDrop create upload pages that route files to your Google Drive folder.

The problem: - Requires setup and configuration — connecting Google Drive, setting permissions, configuring the form. - Free tiers are limited (time, submissions, or storage). - Adds a third-party dependency between your uploaders and your Drive. - Still counts against your Google Drive storage quota.

When it works: If you specifically need files to land in Google Drive and you're willing to pay for and configure a bridge tool.

Instead of making Google Drive do something it wasn't designed for, use a tool built specifically for collecting files.

With getfiles.app:

  1. Type a title describing what you need
  2. Click "Create upload link"
  3. Share the link — by email, text, QR code, whatever
  4. People upload without any account — no Google, no anything
  5. You download everything as ZIP

No Google account needed for uploaders. This alone makes it better than every Google Drive workaround for external file collection.

No storage limit tied to your Drive. Your 15 GB Google quota is unaffected.

No configuration. No permissions to set, no forms to build, no third-party integrations to connect.

But I want files in Google Drive

If you specifically need files in Google Drive after collection, the workflow is simple:

  1. Create upload link at getfiles.app
  2. Share with people
  3. Download the ZIP when collection is complete
  4. Upload the ZIP contents to your Google Drive folder

One extra step, but you gain: no Google account requirement for uploaders, password protection, file checklists, resumable uploads, custom branding, and automatic expiration. Worth it.

Comparison

Feature Google Drive (shared folder) Google Forms getfiles.app
Uploader needs Google account Yes Yes No
Upload-only (can't see/delete others' files) No Yes Yes
Drag and drop Yes No Yes
File checklist No No Yes
Password protection No No Yes
Resumable uploads Partial No Yes
Auto-expiration No No Yes
Max files Unlimited 10 per submission Unlimited
Setup time 2-5 min 5-10 min 10 seconds
Price Free (15 GB) Free (10 GB) Free

The bottom line

Google Drive is excellent for storing and collaborating on files. It's not designed for collecting files from external people. Every workaround introduces friction — account requirements, configuration complexity, or storage limitations.

If you need a file request link, use a tool built for that specific purpose. It's faster to set up, easier for uploaders, and doesn't touch your Google Drive quota.

getfiles.app — create a file request link in 10 seconds. Free, no Google account needed.