has disrupted the cloud storage market by offering a massive 1TB (1024GB) of free cloud storage to users. However, the TeraBox desktop and web interfaces can be limiting, often lacking the robust synchronization, mounting, and automation capabilities offered by professional cloud providers.
Combining Rclone with TeraBox offers power users a fascinating compromise. You get access to one of the largest free cloud storage tiers available today, stripped of a restrictive user interface and ad-heavy official applications.
Warning: This makes the destination identical to the source, meaning it will delete files in TeraBox if they do not exist locally.
The free tier comes with significant limitations that many users discover the hard way: a , and a per-account hard limit of around 20 large files. This effectively reduces usable storage closer to 80GB than the advertised 1TB. Free downloads are throttled to roughly 200–800 KB/s with one concurrent file at a time; premium plans lift that to 15–20 MB/s with five concurrent files. Rclone Terabox
bclone crypt remote:path crypt:path
Enter , the "Swiss army knife" of cloud storage, a powerful command-line program designed to manage files on over 70+ cloud providers. By linking Rclone with TeraBox, you can transform that free TB into a fully integrated network drive.
You will be prompted to create a new remote. Give it a name (e.g., myterabox ), then select the corresponding number for "Terabox" from the list of providers. has disrupted the cloud storage market by offering
Key advantages of CloudsLinker include:
Keep files on both Terabox and a primary provider for belt-and-suspenders backup. This is cost-effective redundancy using free storage.
Press F12 to open the Developer Tools, and navigate to the or Application/Storage tab. Look for the Cookies section under the TeraBox domain. You get access to one of the largest
If your goal is seamless automation, many rclone-friendly providers offer better reliability, even if they provide less free space than TeraBox's terabyte. Is It Worth It?
(Linux/macOS requires FUSE; Windows requires WinFsp)