Gallery - Photo Gallery & Album

Gallery - Photo Gallery & Album does the basics well, then pushes ads between actions and asks for the storage permission every time you open the vault. We tested seven Gallery alternatives that match its scope, browse, lock, edit, and play, with cleaner pricing and faster scrolling on large libraries.

The list mixes cloud-first apps with strict offline open-source options, plus a couple of paid alternatives for power users who shoot a lot.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planStarting price/moStandout feature
Google PhotosCloud backup and search15 GB shared with DriveAround $2 for 100 GBAI search by content
Fossify GalleryFOSS no-ads no-trackingFully free, no adsFreeBuilt-in vault and editor
Aves GalleryPower-user offlineFully free, no adsFreeGeotagged map view
F-Stop Gallery ProPaid feature-richLimited free versionOne-time paymentTag-based organization
Gallery: Album Photo VaultVault-firstFree with adsAround $3 for ProPIN, fingerprint, and pattern locks
Simple Gallery ProPaid offlinePaid onlyOne-time paymentCustomizable layouts and themes
PikturesVisual browsingFree with adsAround $3 for PremiumGesture-based navigation

Three issues come up across reviews.

The first is ad pacing. Opening an album, deleting a photo, or entering the vault often triggers a full-screen ad. The pacing is heavy enough that scrolling a large library feels interrupted.

The second is permission prompts. The app asks for storage and notification access repeatedly, especially after Android updates. Some features will not work without a full media library permission.

The third is performance on big libraries. Phones with 20,000 plus photos see slow thumbnails and stutter while scrolling. The auto-arrangement by date and location stalls on first load.

The seven alternatives below answer at least one of these.

The alternatives

Google Photos is the default for anyone willing to back up to Google’s cloud. It indexes photos by face, location, and content, which makes “find that beach photo from 2022” work in seconds. The free tier gives 15 GB shared with Gmail and Drive.

Where it falls short: Storage is shared with Drive and Gmail, which fills fast. High-quality uploads beyond the free quota need a Google One subscription. Privacy-conscious users dislike cloud indexing.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Photos are already in the device storage Google Photos reads. Enable backup and let it sync overnight. Albums in Gallery do not transfer; recreate them inside Google Photos.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Google Photos if cloud backup and AI search matter most. Skip if you want a strictly local gallery.

Fossify Gallery is the actively maintained fork of Simple Gallery, free, open source, and ad-free. It includes a vault, basic editor, slideshow, and recycle bin without asking for cloud access or unnecessary permissions. Gallery - Photo Gallery vs Fossify Gallery on the no-ads test is decided on install.

Where it falls short: No cloud backup, no AI search, no automatic face grouping. Editor is basic compared with InShot’s Gallery.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Open the app, grant storage permission, and the same photos appear. Vault content from Gallery stays inside Gallery’s encrypted folder; move files manually if you want them in Fossify’s vault.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Fossify Gallery if you want a clean, ad-free, offline-first gallery. Skip if cloud sync is non-negotiable.

Aves Gallery is the FOSS option for people with thousands of photos who want to search by EXIF data, location, and tags. It renders a map of every geotagged photo, which Gallery does not offer.

Where it falls short: UI takes a session to learn. No vault built in; relies on Android system features for hiding.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Install Aves, grant storage permission, and the same library is visible. Aves does not break or move files; it reads the same folders.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Aves if you want a metadata-rich offline gallery. Skip if you prefer simpler grids.

F-Stop Gallery Pro is a long-running paid gallery that uses tags, ratings, and nested folders to organize photos. The Pro version is a one-time payment and works fully offline. Gallery - Photo Gallery vs F-Stop on power-user features is no contest.

Where it falls short: UI is dated. No cloud sync, no AI features.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Photos appear immediately. Build your tag system in F-Stop; Gallery’s albums are folder-based and translate as folders.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick F-Stop Gallery Pro if you tag, rate, and curate. Skip for casual gallery use.

Gallery: Album, Photo Vault by InShot is a sister app to the original and leans harder into the vault use case. PIN, pattern, and fingerprint locks all work, plus a fake-vault decoy mode. The base gallery features mirror Gallery - Photo Gallery without some of the ad insertions.

Where it falls short: Still ad-supported. Editor is shallow compared with Polish or Lumii.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Both apps read the same Android media library. The vault is encrypted per-app, so private photos must be re-imported into the new vault and removed from the old one.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Gallery: Album, Photo Vault if the vault is the main reason you installed Gallery. Skip for cloud-first workflows.

Simple Gallery Pro is the original paid gallery that Fossify forked, still maintained, and still ad-free. It is now under Goodwy/SimpleMobile rebranding. For users who paid once years ago and want to keep using it, the app remains a clean local gallery.

Where it falls short: Development has slowed in favor of the Fossify fork. No cloud sync.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Photos appear immediately. Album naming convention is folder-based; recreate the structure you used in Gallery if needed.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Simple Gallery Pro if you already own it or prefer a paid lifetime model. New installs should consider Fossify Gallery instead.

Piktures — Best gesture-based browsing

Piktures organizes photos around swipe gestures and a clean visual layout. It is friendlier to people who prefer flipping through photos like a deck rather than scrolling a grid. Vault and basic editing are included.

Where it falls short: Free tier has ads. Premium tier covers a smaller feature set than F-Stop or Fossify.

Pricing:

Migrating from Gallery: Photos appear immediately. Albums map to folders. Vault contents must be re-imported.

Download:

Bottom line: Pick Piktures if you want a calmer browsing UI. Skip if you want power-user tag features.

How to choose

Pick Google Photos if you want cloud backup and AI search built in. The free 15 GB will not last for big libraries, but the search alone is hard to give up once you use it.

Pick Fossify Gallery for ad-free, FOSS, no-tracking gallery use. It is the closest replacement to Gallery - Photo Gallery on local features.

Pick Aves Gallery if you want geotagging, metadata search, and a power-user UI.

Pick F-Stop Gallery Pro if you tag and curate. The one-time payment beats years of in-app ads.

Pick Gallery: Album, Photo Vault if the vault is the main feature you cared about.

Stay on Gallery - Photo Gallery & Album if you specifically use its built-in editor and collage maker and the ad load does not bother you.

FAQ

Fossify Gallery on Android. It is FOSS, ad-free, and ships with a vault and basic editor. Aves Gallery is the strongest free option for metadata and map view.

For cloud backup and search, yes. For strictly local use without cloud sync, Fossify Gallery is better. The two apps target different use cases; many users run both.

No. Each gallery encrypts its vault with its own scheme, so private photos must be re-imported into the new app and then removed from the old one. Plan the move during low-photo hours.

Which alternative is most private?

Fossify Gallery and Aves Gallery. Both are open source, ad-free, and do no telemetry. F-Stop Gallery Pro is closed source but works fully offline.

Fossify Gallery is free and ad-free. Simple Gallery Pro, F-Stop Pro, and Aves are ad-free. Google Photos and Piktures show ads or upgrade prompts on free tiers.

Aves Gallery and F-Stop Gallery Pro are the strongest on libraries above 20,000 photos. Both load thumbnails progressively and rely on EXIF instead of on-device AI indexing.