ToolsRanks

AVG review (2026): verdict, pros & cons

Long-standing free antivirus brand sharing Avast's engine, with affordable paid Internet Security tiers (Gen Digital).

We sized up AVG against the rest of the antivirus field on value and fit, and here is the short of it.

Verdict: If free-tier is your priority, AVG rarely disappoints. Our editorial rating is 4.3/5 — an editorial assessment from sourced research and feature comparison, not an average of user reviews.

Who AVG is for

Reach for AVG first when your work centres on free-tier and budget. When that lines up with your workflow it pays off fast; otherwise it can feel like more tool than you need.

Notable features

In practice, the features that define AVG are concrete:

A long-standing free antivirus brand running Avast's proven detection engine.

Pros & cons

What stands out

Watch-outs

Pricing: Free tier; ~$50-80/year Internet Security · full pricing breakdown →

Bottom line

Bottom line: as a antivirus tool, AVG is an easy recommendation when free-tier is central, a free plan lets you trial it at zero cost, and with paid plans start around $50/mo the smart move is to test it on one real task before scaling up.

See AVG plans →

FAQ

Is AVG good?

In our assessment, yes for its core use case: free-tier. We rate it 4.3/5 editorially. If free-tier is your priority, AVG rarely disappoints.

Is AVG 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 AVG?

Shares Avast's history and Jumpshot data-selling baggage; Renewal pricing much higher than intro; Free tier lacks ransomware/phishing protections.

Sources

Our read on AVG draws on these independent reviews and vendor pages: