Avast One review (2026): verdict, pros & cons
Free antivirus heritage plus an all-in-one Avast One suite with VPN and breach monitoring (Gen Digital).
Here is an independent read on Avast One: where it shines as a antivirus option, where it slips, and whether it earns its price.
Verdict: Avast One earns its place for teams that put free-tier first. Our editorial rating is 4.0/5 — an editorial assessment from sourced research and feature comparison, not an average of user reviews.
Who Avast One is for
Avast One makes the most sense for free-tier and all-in-one. If that matches how you'll use it, value comes quickly; if your needs sit outside that core, a more focused or cheaper tool may serve you better.
Notable features
In practice, the features that define Avast One are concrete:
- Free antivirus tier with real-time protection
- Avast One all-in-one suite (antivirus, VPN, scam protection)
- Data breach monitoring
- AI-powered scam detection
- Device cleanup/tune-up tools
Long-standing free antivirus now rebuilt as the modular Avast One suite.
Pros & cons
What we like
- + Capable free tier with real-time protection
- + All-in-one Avast One suite
- + Strong lab certifications (AV-Test, AV-Comparatives, SE Labs)
Trade-offs
- - Past trust damage: sold user browsing data via Jumpshot (FTC fined it $16.5M)
- - Frequent upsell prompts in free version
- - Owned by Gen Digital (same engine as AVG/Norton)
Bottom line
The short version: Avast One rewards anyone whose work leans on free-tier, a free plan lets you trial it at zero cost, and paid plans start around $50/mo, so run a quick trial on a live project before committing.
FAQ
Is Avast One good?
In our assessment, yes for its core use case: free-tier. We rate it 4.0/5 editorially. Avast One earns its place for teams that put free-tier first.
Is Avast One worth the money?
Paid plans start around $50/mo. For free-tier it generally justifies the cost; if that is not your main need, weigh it against cheaper alternatives first.
What are the downsides of Avast One?
Past trust damage: sold user browsing data via Jumpshot (FTC fined it $16.5M); Frequent upsell prompts in free version; Owned by Gen Digital (same engine as AVG/Norton).
Sources
Our read on Avast One draws on these independent reviews and vendor pages: