AURA starts with identity protection and works in the opposite direction, bundling antivirus, a VPN, and a password manager into a platform primarily designed to protect who you are rather than just the devices you use.
After going through the full signup process and reviewing the product in detail, I found a service with genuinely impressive identity and financial monitoring, a thoughtful dashboard, and some meaningful limitations worth knowing before you commit.
This review covers the antivirus component honestly, including the fact that it has not been independently tested by AV-TEST or AV-Comparatives in the way most other products in this series have. The focus here is on the full picture of what Aura actually is and what it actually does.
Pros and Cons
- All plans include $1 million identity theft insurance
- 14-day free trial with no charge until the trial ends
- 60-day money-back guarantee on annual plans
- Financial transaction monitoring with real-time alerts
- Data broker removal handled automatically with no manual input required
- White Glove Fraud Resolution with a dedicated case manager
- VPN with 100 plus virtual locations included on all plans
- 24/7 US-based customer support on all plans
- No independent AV-TEST or AV-Comparatives scores for the antivirus component
- Phishing protection is weak based on third-party hands-on testing
- Mac version has no real-time antivirus protection
Before you enter that information, note that Aura uses AES-256 encryption and is SOC 2 Type 2 certified, which is the same security standard used by banks. If you decide the product is not for you, cancel before the 14-day trial ends, and you will not be charged.
Rating Breakdown
To evaluate Aura, I applied the same methodology used across all reviews on this site, with one important adjustment.
Because Aura is primarily an identity protection platform rather than a traditional antivirus, the Protection parameter reflects a broader assessment of all its security capabilities rather than just malware detection rates. Each parameter is scored out of 10.
| Parameter | Score | Why this score |
| Pricing | 9.2/10 | The Individual plan is accessible, and the features-per-dollar ratio is strong for identity protection. The Family plan covers unlimited devices and up to 5 adults, which represents good value for larger households. |
| Security features | 9.0/10 | The breadth of what Aura covers across identity, financial, antivirus, VPN, parental controls, and data broker removal is unmatched in this review series. The antivirus component alone would not justify this score, but the full platform does. |
| Protection | 7.5/10 | No independent AV-TEST or AV-Comparatives antivirus results are available. Third-party hands-on testing has shown strong malware detection at 99% but very weak phishing protection at 5%. Identity monitoring and financial fraud detection are strong and well-regarded. |
| Performance | 8.5/10 | Aura’s antivirus runs full scans quickly at around 13 minutes on a clean system. Some performance overhead has been noted during boot and file operations in third-party testing, though background impact is minimal during normal use. |
| Ease of use | 9.4/10 | The dashboard is clean, the onboarding is guided, and the customizable plan setup is genuinely flexible. The initial signup requires more personal information than a typical antivirus, which is expected for identity protection, but can feel unfamiliar. |
| Support | 7.5/10 | The AI quality and Help Center content are strong. The restricted chat hours and the absence of human chat outside that window hold the score back from the higher range, particularly given that identity theft incidents are not confined to business hours. |
| Overall | 8.5/10 | Aura is the right product for users who want identity and financial protection as their primary concern, with antivirus and VPN included rather than leading the package. For users whose main need is antivirus, other products in this series offer better-tested device protection at a lower price. |
1. Plans and Pricing
Aura structures its plans around the number of adults being protected rather than the number of devices.
Every plan covers unlimited devices per adult member, which is a meaningful practical advantage for households with multiple laptops, phones, and tablets.
What stands out about Aura’s pricing structure is how much is included at every tier. Aura’s main variable is the number of adults covered. Every adult member gets the full feature set, including identity theft insurance, credit monitoring, antivirus, VPN, password manager, and data broker removal.
The plan customization screen also reveals optional add-ons worth knowing about:
- Email protection: scans your inbox for phishing in real time, at an additional monthly cost
- Scam protection insurance: up to $50,000 for losses from scams, phishing, and cryptocurrency crime, at an additional monthly cost
- $5M identity theft insurance: expands coverage from the included $1M to $5M for HSA, 401k, home title, and other losses
The 60-day money-back guarantee applies to annual plans purchased through Aura.com or through customer support. It does not apply to monthly plans, which are not eligible for a refund at all. It also does not apply to purchases made through Amazon.
To cancel and request a refund, you call Aura’s customer support line at 1-855-712-0021 within 60 days of your initial purchase date. If you signed up through a free trial, the 60-day window starts from the trial start date, not the date your first payment was charged.
| Plan | Monthly (Billed Monthly) | Monthly (Billed Annually) | Coverage Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | $15.00 / mo | $12.00 / mo ($144/yr) | 1 Adult, 10 Devices, $1M Insurance |
| Couple | $29.00 / mo | $22.00 / mo ($264/yr) | 2 Adults, 20 Devices, $2M Insurance total |
| Family | $50.00 / mo | $32.00 / mo ($384/yr) | 5 Adults, Unlimited Kids & Devices, $5M Insurance total |
Aura accepts credit and debit cards and PayPal.
2. Security Features
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Antivirus | Real-time protection for Windows and Android. Manual/custom scans only for Mac. Covers viruses, ransomware, and more. (Note: Not available on iOS due to Apple restrictions). |
| VPN (Online Security) | 100+ locations with AES-256 encryption. Includes a kill switch (plan dependent) and split tunneling. Branded as “Online Security” for better accessibility. |
| Password Manager | Cross-device syncing on mobile and browsers. Features CSV imports, multi-factor authentication, and email alias generation. |
| Identity Monitoring | Tracks SSN, emails, and financial accounts against dark web databases with near-real-time alerts. |
| Credit Monitoring | Three-bureau (Experian, Equifax, TransUnion) monitoring. Includes monthly score updates, annual reports, and instant Experian credit locks. |
| $1M Theft Insurance | Standard on adult plans. Covers legal fees, lost wages, and travel expenses; administered by American Bankers Insurance Company of Florida. |
| Specialized Tools | Includes Data Broker Removal (autopilot), Safe Gaming (Windows only), and Parental Controls (iOS/Android only, powered by Circle). |
3. In-House Testing Results
Aura’s antivirus component has not been submitted to AV-TEST or AV-Comparatives for independent evaluation.
This is a meaningful gap in the available data and is worth stating plainly. The independent labs that test antivirus products continuously and produce the scores I use across the rest of this review series have not published results for Aura.
This does not mean Aura’s antivirus does not work. It means there is less objective evidence available to evaluate how well it works compared to products with years of continuous lab testing behind them.
What I focused on instead
Given the absence of independent lab data for the antivirus, I concentrated my evaluation on the features that make Aura distinctive, and that can be assessed firsthand: the onboarding and identity data setup, the dashboard experience, the plan customization, and the breadth of monitoring that activates once your personal information is entered.
What became clear through this process is that Aura’s strongest and most differentiated capabilities are not in the antivirus engine.
They are in the identity monitoring, financial fraud detection, credit monitoring, and White Glove Fraud Resolution.
These are the features that no pure antivirus product offers at a comparable level, and they are the primary reason most people choose Aura over a traditional antivirus.
The phishing protection gap
The phishing detection figure from third-party testing is the most important number in this section and the one most worth acting on.
If phishing protection is a priority for you, the Aura browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, or Edge should be installed and active at all times.

The VPN-level Safe Browsing and the browser extension work together, and disabling either one leaves a gap. Do not rely on one alone.
4. Impact on PC Performance
Aura’s antivirus engine runs quietly in the background on Windows during normal use. Full scans complete in approximately 13 minutes on a clean system, which is faster than the industry average of around 105 minutes and significantly faster than the previous version of Aura’s antivirus, which took over two hours to complete a full scan.
Subsequent scans on the same system run faster still as the engine optimizes based on previously scanned files.
Testing has noted some performance overhead in specific scenarios:
| Area | Observed Impact |
|---|---|
| Full scan duration | Approximately 13 minutes on a clean system |
| Boot time | Approximately 21% slower with Aura installed |
| File operations during monitoring | Approximately 15% longer for large file move and copy operations |
| Zip and unzip operations | Approximately 6% longer |
| Background impact during normal use | Minimal when not actively scanning |
The boot time and file operation figures represent the highest impact moments. In daily use, once the machine has booted and you are working normally, Aura’s presence in the background has a minimal noticeable effect. The 21% boot slowdown represents a few extra seconds on most machines rather than a significant delay.
For Mac users, the performance impact is lower because real-time protection is not available on macOS. Scans run only when manually initiated, which means Aura is effectively idle on Mac between scans.
5. Getting Started with Aura
To understand what the Aura setup experience actually looks like, I went through the full process myself, from the homepage to having the product configured and running.
Here is exactly what I did and what I found.
Choosing a plan
I started at aura.com, which opens with a clean dark-themed homepage positioning Aura as an AI-powered all-in-one safety platform.

Clicking Start Free Trial in the top right took me to the pricing page, which shows four plans side by side: Family, Couple, Individual, and Kids.

The plans are clearly distinguished by who they cover rather than by which features they include.
Every plan shows a Start Free Trial button and notes the 14-day trial period beneath it. I selected the Family plan to go through the full customization experience.
Customizing the plan
Aura’s plan setup is more detailed than any other product in this review series. Rather than simply picking a tier, you work through a customization screen that lets you:
- Select the number of members to protect (1 adult, 2 adults, or 5 adults plus unlimited kids)
- Choose your identity theft insurance level ($1M included, $5M as an add-on)
- Select scam protection options (call protection is included, email protection and scam insurance are optional add-ons at extra cost)

The right-hand column updates the total cost as you make selections. For the 5 adults plus unlimited kids option with the included $1M insurance and call protection only, the annual total shows as $384 plus tax at the time of my session.
Creating an account and signing up
The checkout page splits into two numbered steps: Create Account and Payment.

Create Account asks for email, first name, and last name. Payment accepts credit or debit cards and PayPal. The order summary on the right side shows the 14-day trial, the annual subtotal, and confirms that Pay today is $0.00.
One important note about what happens after you complete this step. Aura does not consider this the end of setup. Once your account is created, you are taken into the onboarding process, where you supply the personal information that powers the identity monitoring: your name, address, phone number, date of birth, and Social Security Number.
This is the step that surprises many new users. Aura needs this information to start monitoring your identity across dark web databases, credit files, and public records. Without it, the identity protection features do not activate.
Aura takes everything you enter during signup and plugs it directly into their monitoring system. No extra steps are required after that initial entry.
The desktop app
After completing the web setup, you download the Aura desktop application for Windows or macOS.
The app has a simple left sidebar with five items:
- Home
- Antivirus
- Online Security
- Safe Gaming
- Preferences

The Online Security section shows the VPN status and connection details. When active, it displays the encrypted connection status, the duration connected, and the current masked location.

The simplicity of the desktop app is both its strength and its limitation. Everything is one click away from the sidebar, and nothing requires configuration. The trade-off is that there is very little to customize. The Preferences section covers whether the app launches at startup and whether the VPN engages automatically on unsecured networks. That is essentially the full settings menu.

The web dashboard, accessed through aura.com, is where the full depth of Aura’s features lives. The desktop app is the interface for day-to-day security. The web dashboard is where you manage credit monitoring, financial accounts, personal data, family members, and the full alert history.
Verdict on ease of use
Aura’s onboarding is more involved, and that is partly by design. Supplying your Social Security Number, financial accounts, and personal details during signup feels unfamiliar compared to installing a typical antivirus, but it is the information that makes the identity monitoring actually work.
Once you understand that Aura is asking for this data in order to protect it, the process makes sense.
After that initial setup, the day-to-day experience is straightforward. The desktop app is one of the simplest interfaces in this review series, the web dashboard organizes a large volume of information clearly, and the guided onboarding ensures you do not finish setup wondering whether anything is actually active.
The main friction points are the split between the desktop app and the web dashboard across features, and the lack of real-time protection on Mac, which requires users to run scans manually. Neither of these significantly undermines the product, but they are worth knowing before you start. For a service that covers this many features across identity, financial, device, and privacy protection, the overall experience is cleaner than you might expect.
6. Customer Support
Aura offers several ways to get help, and it is worth understanding exactly what is available at what hours before you need to use it.
The main support channels are:
- Help Center at help.aura.com, available at all times with articles, guides, and FAQs organized by category
- Live chat, available daily from 8 AM to 8 PM Eastern Time, accessible through the Aura mobile app or through the green chat bubble on the Aura website
- Phone support at +1 (833) 552-2123, available 24/7 for all account holders
Aura also notes on its support pages that impersonation scams targeting Aura customers have increased, and advises users to only contact support through aura.com or the official Aura apps.
Any unexpected email, text, or call claiming to be from Aura should be reported to support@aura.com before any information is shared.
The live chat experience
I opened the chat from the Aura website. The bot greeted me immediately and suggested I log in for faster, more personalized support, which is reasonable given that Aura’s service is tied closely to account data.
I asked the following question without logging in, as a pre-purchase visitor: if the VPN connection drops while I am browsing, does Aura automatically block my internet traffic to prevent my real IP address from being exposed, or do I need to manually enable a kill switch somewhere in the settings?

The AI’s response was accurate and covered both parts of the question clearly:
- The kill switch exists and can block traffic if the VPN drops
- It is not automatic; you need to enable it manually in the app or desktop VPN settings
- The kill switch is an add-on feature that may not be included on every plan
- It is not available on macOS
The AI then offered to explain how the kill switch differs from Always-on VPN and Connect on Demand, which showed a reasonable depth of product knowledge for an automated response. Both parts of my question were answered correctly and without any follow-up needed.

When I asked to speak with a human agent, the bot informed me that chat agents were not currently available as I was outside the 8 AM to 8 PM Eastern Time window. It directed me to phone support at 877-714-9507, which is available 24/7. No human chat escalation was possible outside those hours.

This is worth knowing clearly. Aura’s marketing describes 24/7 customer support, and that is true for phone. The live chat human agents have a narrower window.
If you contact Aura via chat outside business hours, you will receive AI responses only and be directed to the phone line for anything that requires a person.
The Help Center
Aura’s Help Center at help.aura.com organizes its content into ten clearly labeled categories:
- Getting Started
- Online Security
- Data Breaches
- Credit
- Vault
- Family Protection
- Call Protection
- Transactions
- Antivirus
- Membership

Below the category grid, a Top Questions section presents the most commonly asked questions as expandable items.
These cover topics like what to do if your email is found in a data leak, how to set up parental controls, and how to install the desktop app. A Digital Security 101 section beneath that features educational articles on identity theft, financial fraud, and related topics.
I decided to look at one article to see how detailed the documentation actually is and whether it would genuinely help a user dealing with a real situation. I opened the article titled Email Found in a Data Leak, which is listed as the first Top Question on the Help Center homepage.

The article is well-written and clearly aimed at a non-technical audience. It answers three questions in sequence: why you received the alert, what to do about it, and what Aura will do going forward.
The action steps are practical and specific, covering checking the alert date to understand how old the exposure is, changing the email password, enabling two-factor authentication, watching for phishing attempts, securing inactive email addresses, and contacting Aura’s White Glove team if misuse is suspected.
What I found most useful about the article is the reassurance section at the end, which acknowledges that receiving this kind of alert feels concerning and explains that taking quick action reduces risk even when the data cannot be removed from the original leak.
That kind of contextual explanation is more useful than a list of steps alone, and it reflects an understanding of how anxious a data breach notification can make someone feel.
Support channels summary
| Support channel | Available | My experience |
|---|---|---|
| Live chat (AI) | 24/7 | Connected instantly. AI gave an accurate two-part answer without needing follow-up. Offered to go further without being asked. |
| Live chat (human agents) | 8 AM to 8 PM ET daily | Not available outside those hours. Bot directs to phone for after-hours human support. |
| Phone support | 24/7 at +1 (833) 552-2123 | Not personally tested for this review. |
| Help Center | Always available | Well-organized across ten categories. Articles are clear, practical, and appropriately reassuring in tone. |
| In-app chat | Available via mobile app during chat hours | Not personally tested for this review. |
Verdict on support
Aura’s AI assistant delivered one of the more complete automated responses in this review series. It answered a two-part technical question accurately, flagged important caveats about plan availability and macOS limitations, and offered to go deeper without being prompted. For users reaching out during business hours who then need a human, the handoff to phone support is clear.
The limitation that matters most is the chat-only window. If you are an Aura subscriber experiencing an identity alert or a VPN issue at 11 PM and you prefer chat to a phone call, that option is not available.
Phone is the only path to a human outside the 8 AM to 8 PM Eastern Time window. For a product whose core purpose is protecting people from identity theft, which does not happen on a schedule, a narrower live chat window is a meaningful gap.
The Help Center makes up some ground here. The articles are thoughtful rather than perfunctory, and the structure is logical enough that most common questions can be answered without needing to contact anyone at all.
Is Aura Worth It?
Aura is a genuinely different kind of product from everything else in this review series, and the right way to evaluate it reflects that difference. If you measure it purely as an antivirus, it compares unfavourably to Norton, McAfee, and Malwarebytes, all of which have years of independent lab data behind them and stronger tested phishing protection.
If you measure it as an identity and financial protection platform with antivirus, VPN, and a password manager included, it is one of the most comprehensive services available at its price point.
The strongest case for Aura is for users who are primarily concerned about identity theft and financial fraud rather than malware alone. The $1M identity theft insurance, White Glove Fraud Resolution, three-bureau credit monitoring, financial transaction monitoring, and automated data broker removal are features that no pure antivirus in this series provides. For a US-based user who has had their information exposed in a data breach, has concerns about financial fraud, or wants a dedicated case manager if something goes wrong with their identity, Aura offers protection that Norton and McAfee do not match at any price tier.
The product also represents good value for families. The Family plan covers unlimited devices across five adults plus unlimited children, which makes the per-device cost lower than most alternatives once you account for a household with multiple machines and phones.
The limitations to be clear-eyed about are:
- The antivirus component lacks independent lab testing and has tested poorly for phishing in third-party evaluations
- Mac users do not get real-time antivirus protection
- Parental controls work only on mobile devices
- Many of the most compelling features require a US Social Security Number and are primarily useful for US residents

