Compare the Top Backup Software for Linux as of January 2026 - Page 3

  • 1
    Relica

    Relica

    Light Code Labs

    Back up your files from all your computers, to anywhere. Relica automatically copies your files to multiple places... just in case. Back up to your external hard drives, USB flash drives, or mounted NAS drives whenever they're plugged in. Relica makes on-site backups easy and reliable. Keep copies of your files off-site at no extra cost. Back up to other computers on your own account, or your friends' or family members' computers. The easiest way to back up! The Relica Cloud replicates to up to 5 fully-redundant, independent cloud providers in real time with just a single upload of your data. Having more than one backup is important. For example, if you back up to a USB drive, but then your laptop is stolen along with that flash drive, you're out of luck! We recommend backing up to 2 or more destinations, and Relica makes that as easy as checking a box.
    Starting Price: $5 per month
  • 2
    Duplicati

    Duplicati

    Duplicati

    Free backup software to store encrypted backups online For Windows, macOS and Linux. Duplicati works with standard protocols like FTP, SSH, and WebDAV as well as popular services like Backblaze B2, Tardigrade, Microsoft OneDrive, Amazon S3, Google Drive, box.com, Mega, hubiC, and many others. Backup files and folders with strong AES-256 encryption. Save space with incremental backups and data deduplication. Run backups on any machine through the web-based interface or via a command-line interface. Duplicati has a built-in scheduler and auto-updater. Duplicati is free software and open source. You can use Duplicati for free even for commercial purposes. Source code is licensed under LGPL. Duplicati runs under Windows, Linux, and MacOS. It requires .NET 4.5 or Mono. Duplicati uses strong AES-256 encryption to protect your privacy. You can also use GPG to encrypt your backup. Duplicati was designed for online backups from scratch.
    Starting Price: Free