McAfee’s independent lab data places it at the top of the performance chart with the lowest system impact of any product tested in the AV-Comparatives April 2026 Performance Test, and the feature set goes well beyond basic antivirus into identity protection, scam detection, and financial monitoring.
What it trades off in return is some flexibility in how features are configured, and a settings menu that requires more clicks than it should. Read on for the full breakdown of what I found.
Pros and Cons
- Ranked 1st for lowest system impact in AV-Comparatives April 2026
- Unlimited device coverage on Advanced plans
- Identity theft coverage up to $1 million included
- AI-powered scam and deepfake detection
- Includes firewall with customization options
- 30-day money-back guarantee
- The settings menu structure requires more clicks than necessary
- No dedicated webcam protection
- Renewal pricing is significantly higher than Year 1 rate
- Scan scheduling is less flexible than competitors
- 30-day MBG does not apply to monthly subscribers
Rating Breakdown
To evaluate McAfee, I applied the same consistent methodology used across all the antivirus reviews on this site. The scores below combine the most recent independent lab data from AV-Comparatives with my hands-on experience using the product from purchase through day-to-day use.
Each parameter is scored out of 10.
| Parameter | Score | Why this score |
| Pricing | 9.0/10 | The Essential plan is accessible at the first-year rate and the Advanced Individual plan’s unlimited device coverage represents genuine value for multi-device households. The renewal rates are substantially higher and require active management before the billing date. |
| Security features | 9.0/10 | A comprehensive package covering antivirus, firewall, VPN, web protection, identity monitoring, financial monitoring, scam detection, and parental controls. The main gap is the lack of dedicated webcam protection and limited scan scheduling flexibility. |
| Protection | 9.0/10 | Strong independent lab results from AV-Comparatives across the Malware Protection Test and Real-World Protection Test. Consistently performing at the top tier across multiple test series. |
| Performance | 9.5/10 | Ranked 1st out of 20 products in AV-Comparatives April 2026 Performance Test with the lowest impact score of 3.3, earning Advanced Plus. The lightest footprint of any product in this review series. |
| Ease of use | 8.5/10 | The main dashboard is clean and intuitive. The settings area is less well-designed, using expandable boxes that close when others are opened and a back button that returns to Home rather than the previous settings page. |
| Support | 8.0/10 | The fast connection times and easy-to-find support page are genuine positives. The incomplete responses from both the AI and the human agent, combined with the account verification friction for a non-subscriber, pull the score down. The 24/7 availability is there, but the quality of answers does not consistently match the accessibility of the channels. |
| Overall | 8.8/10 | McAfee is a capable, feature-rich antivirus with the lowest system impact in the current AV-Comparatives test series. The identity protection and financial monitoring features make it particularly well-suited to users who want comprehensive coverage beyond standard antivirus. The settings area needs work and renewal pricing requires planning. |
1. Plans and Pricing
McAfee offers three plans positioned around individual users, power users, and families. The pricing widget below shows the current rates.
McAfee+ Individual Plans
| Plan | 1st Year Price | Renewal Price | Key Features |
| Basic | $29.99 | $84.99 | 1 Device, Antivirus, VPN, Password Manager |
| Essential | $39.99 | $119.99 | 5 Devices, Identity Monitoring & Alerts |
| Premium | $49.99 | $149.99 | Unlimited Devices, Personal Data Cleanup (Scans) |
| Advanced | $89.99 | $199.99 | Unlimited Devices, $1M Insurance, Full Data Removal |
| Ultimate | $149.99 | $279.99 | Unlimited Devices, $2M Insurance, 3-Bureau Credit Monitoring |
McAfee+ Family Plans
| Tier | 1st Year Price | Renewal Price | Family Exclusives |
| Premium Family | $69.99 | $159.99 | Parental Controls, Unlimited Devices |
| Advanced Family | $119.99 | $249.99 | $1M Insurance per Adult, Child ID Monitoring |
| Ultimate Family | $199.99 | $424.99 | $2M Insurance per Adult, 3-Bureau Credit (Adults) |
McAfee Small Business Security
| Plan | 1st Year Price | Devices Covered | Management |
| Standard Business | $94.99 | 5 Devices | Individual device management |
| Business Plus | $124.99 | 10 Devices | Centralized Cloud Console for owner |
The most distinctive pricing feature compared to other products in this series is the unlimited device coverage on the Advanced plans.
For households with multiple laptops, phones, and tablets, paying a single subscription that covers all devices, rather than counting devices against a limit, is a meaningful practical advantage.
The 30-day money-back guarantee applies to annual subscribers who request within 30 days of purchase. If your subscription auto-renews, you have 60 days from the renewal charge to request a refund on that renewal. Monthly subscribers are not eligible for the money-back guarantee at all.
McAfee accepts the following payment methods:
- Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover credit and debit cards
- PayPal
- Klarna for buy now pay later in installments
Is there a free version?
McAfee does not offer a permanent free tier. A free email scan is available on the homepage that checks whether your email address has appeared in a known data breach, but it is not a full antivirus product. To access the software, you need a paid subscription.
2. Security Features
| Task | McAfee’s rating | What it means |
| File copying | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Archiving and unarchiving | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Installing applications | Very Fast | Does not slow software installs |
| Launching applications (first run) | Very Fast | No impact even on first open |
| Launching applications (subsequent runs) | Very Fast | No impact |
| Downloading files | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Browsing websites | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
3. In-House Testing Results
To evaluate McAfee’s protection, I reviewed the most recent results published by AV-Comparatives, the independent testing organization that evaluates antivirus products under controlled, real-world conditions.
The results I am drawing from cover three separate test series: the Real-World Protection Test for February to March 2026, the Malware Protection Test for March 2026, and the Performance Test for April 2026.
All tests were conducted on Windows 11 with up-to-date third-party software.
Real-World Protection Test: February to March 2026
The Real-World Protection Test is one of AV-Comparatives’ most demanding evaluations. It uses live test cases, meaning malicious URLs found actively in the field, covering working exploits and drive-by downloads.
This is not a static sample set: the test uses the same infection vectors a real user would encounter while browsing the web with all protection features active.

Source: AV-Comparatives Real-World Protection Test Feb-Mar 2026 factsheet
The test covered 200 live test cases across February and March 2026, run on an up-to-date Windows 11 Pro 64-bit system. McAfee Total Protection versions 1.35 and 1.36 were tested. The results placed McAfee among the top performers in the test series.
The chart in the factsheet confirms McAfee’s protection rate remained consistently high across both months, with minimal compromised cases and a low false positive count.

Source: AV-Comparatives, Real-World Protection Test February to March 2026
Malware Protection Test: March 2026
The Malware Protection Test takes a broader approach than the Real-World test. Rather than live URLs, it uses a large set of malware samples collected from the wild and tests both online and offline detection, giving a picture of how the product performs with and without access to cloud intelligence.
McAfee performed strongly across the malware sample set, with high online protection rates and a manageable false positive count. The test confirmed that McAfee’s engine handles both signature-based detection of known malware and behavioral detection of newer variants effectively.

Source: AV-Comparatives, Malware Protection Test March 2026
Performance Test: April 2026
This is where McAfee’s results are most striking. AV-Comparatives tested 20 consumer antivirus products across a range of everyday tasks on an Intel Core i3 machine with 8 GB of RAM and an SSD, representing a realistic low-end system configuration.
| AV-Comparatives result | Score |
|---|---|
| AVC Score | 90 out of 90 |
| Procyon Score | 96.7 out of 100 |
| Overall Impact Score | 3.3 (lower is better) |
| Rank | 1st out of 20 products |
| Award | Advanced Plus |
McAfee ranked first overall with the lowest impact score in the entire test. Every competitor in the test had a higher system impact.
The Procyon score of 96.7 out of 100 in the Office Productivity Benchmark confirms that McAfee costs you less than 4% of your machine’s productivity performance while running in the background.

Source: AV-Comparatives, Performance Test April 2026
Verdict on testing results
The three AV-Comparatives test results tell a consistent and compelling story. McAfee blocks real-world web threats effectively, handles a broad range of malware samples across both online and offline scenarios, and does all of this while having the lightest footprint of any product in the April 2026 performance test.
That last result is the most practically meaningful one for most users: a product that protects without slowing you down is worth significantly more in everyday use than one that requires you to notice it is there.
For context, in the same Performance Test where McAfee ranked 1st with an impact score of 3.3:
- Norton ranked 5th with an impact score of 5.3
- TotalAV ranked 14th with an impact score of 18.2
- The worst performer scored 33.4

The gap between McAfee and TotalAV in system impact is particularly notable given that both products aim at a similar price point.
4. Impact on PC Performance
McAfee has the lightest system footprint of any product I reviewed in this series. The AV-Comparatives April 2026 Performance Test put that on record officially, ranking it 1st out of 20 products with an impact score of 3.3 and the Advanced Plus award.
Here is how it rated across each individual task in the test:
| Task | McAfee’s rating | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| File copying | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Archiving and unarchiving | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Installing applications | Very Fast | Does not slow software installs |
| Launching applications (first run) | Very Fast | No impact even on first open |
| Launching applications (subsequent runs) | Very Fast | No impact |
| Downloading files | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
| Browsing websites | Very Fast | No noticeable impact |
Source: AV-Comparatives, Performance Test April 2026
McAfee rated Very Fast across every single task category, which no other product in the test achieved with the same consistency.
The Procyon Office Productivity Benchmark score of 96.7 out of 100 confirms this: with McAfee running, your machine operates at 96.7% of the speed it would achieve with no security software installed at all.
In practice, this means McAfee is genuinely invisible in day-to-day use. You are unlikely to notice it during file operations, software installs, downloads, or browsing. That is not a common result at this price point, and it is one of McAfee’s clearest practical advantages over the competition.
5. Getting Started with McAfee
To understand what the McAfee setup experience actually looks like, I went through the full process myself from the website to having the product running and configured.
Here is exactly what I did and what I found.
Choosing a plan and checking out
I started at mcafee.com, which opens with a bold, full-screen hero section promoting McAfee’s scam detection capabilities and a live email-breach scanner directly on the homepage. Two calls to action sit front and center: See Plans and Help Me Choose.

I clicked See Plans, which took me to the plan comparison page showing all three options side by side with their pricing, device coverage, and feature lists.

One thing I noticed immediately is that the pricing page is transparent. The crossed-out standard price and the first-year promotional price are both clearly visible, and a savings figure sits beneath each plan.
This makes it easy to understand what you are getting at what cost without having to dig through footnotes.
I selected the Advanced Individual plan and was taken to a clean two-step checkout page. On the left were the email and payment fields. On the right was the order summary, which showed the first-year total, the discount applied, and the auto-renewal terms in plain language.

The checkout confirmed the renewal price of $199.99 per year and stated clearly that cancellation must happen at least 31 days before the term ends, with a 30-day reminder email sent in advance.
I appreciated that this information appeared on the checkout page before payment rather than buried in the terms after the fact.
McAfee accepts the following at checkout:
- PayPal
- Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, and JCB credit and debit cards
Downloading and installing
After completing the purchase, I was directed to protection.mcafee.com to download the software. McAfee offers five ways to sign in:
- Email and password
- One-time passcode sent to your registered email
- Continue with Apple
- Continue with Google
- Continue with Microsoft
Once signed in, the Device section on the protection portal shows a Download button for the current device and a Download to more devices option for other machines on your plan.

The multi-device download is handled in three ways:
- QR code for scanning with a mobile device camera
- Email link sent to the device you want to protect
- SMS link sent to a phone number

This is a practical system for households with multiple devices. You do not need to log into each device separately. You send the appropriate link and installation follows from there.
Installation on Windows took around three minutes from clicking the downloaded file to the product being active. There were no bundled extras to decline and no unnecessary prompts beyond the standard Windows User Account Control confirmation.
The dashboard
After installation, McAfee opened directly into its dashboard. The first screen I saw prompted me to run a virus scan, with three options presented clearly: Not now, Full scan, or Quick scan.

I ran a quick scan immediately. Once it completed, the dashboard updated to show the protected status confirmed with a trophy graphic and the message “Your PC’s protected.”
The dashboard is organized across five tabs at the top:
- Home: Security status overview, protected device list, and the option to add more devices
- PC Security: Scan controls, real-time protection, firewall, and web protection settings
- PC Performance: App Boost, Web Boost, and file shredder tools
- My Privacy: VPN, browser security, and tracker controls
- My Info: Identity monitoring, credit monitoring, and personal data cleanup

The Home tab gives you an at-a-glance picture of how many apps, web connections, and other PC tasks McAfee is actively protecting, shown as a live running count beneath the security status.
I found this a useful touch that makes the background activity visible rather than invisible.
The bottom left of the dashboard shows a list of connected devices on the account, with a Protect more devices button for adding further machines within the subscription limit.
The settings area
Settings are accessible via the gear icon in the top right of the dashboard. This opens a General Settings and Alerts page with five expandable sections:
- General Settings
- Informational Alerts
- Protection Alerts
- Access Protection
- Startup Settings

The settings structure is functional but has two friction points worth calling out.
First, when you expand one section, all others collapse, so you cannot view multiple setting groups at once and must repeatedly open and close sections to compare options.
Second, the back button from within any settings page returns you to the Home tab rather than back to the settings menu, which means an extra click every time you want to move between settings categories.
These are minor irritations, but they add up when you are trying to configure multiple things in sequence. Most competitors handle this with a persistent sidebar or a flat settings list that does not require constant navigation.
Mobile apps
McAfee has dedicated mobile apps for Android, iOS, and Chromebook, available through their respective stores. Installation on mobile follows the same process: download via the link at protection.mcafee.com or scan the QR code in the Device section, then install and sign in.
The mobile apps cover real-time protection, VPN, identity monitoring alerts, and web protection. iOS apps are more limited by Apple’s restrictions on background access, but the core monitoring features work across both platforms.
6. Customer Support
To get a firsthand picture of McAfee’s support, I went through the live chat myself with a genuine two-part technical question. Here is exactly what happened from start to finish.
Finding the support page
McAfee’s Contact Us page is easy to locate from the main navigation. The page is clean and presents the options without any confusion:
- Chat With Us: Available 24/7 with a clearly visible Start Chat button
- Call Us: US number 1-866-622-3911, available 24/7
- My Cases: For following up on previous support interactions
- A Countries and Phone Numbers button for international callers

There is no hunting through menus or navigating multiple pages to reach a human. The support channels are front and center, which is a good sign before the conversation even starts.
Live Chat
I clicked Start Chat and was immediately connected to McAfee’s Support Assistant, an AI-powered agent. I asked the following question:
“I have McAfee installed on my Windows laptop. I noticed that when I run a full scan, some folders on my external hard drive are not being scanned. How do I make sure external drives are included in the full scan, and does real-time protection cover files I open from an external drive?”
The AI responded within one minute with a four-step process for including external drives in a manual scan. The steps covered opening the software, navigating to the My Protection tab, clicking Manual Scan, and selecting the external drive. The response ended with a request to try the steps and report back.

There are two problems with this answer. First, it addressed the manual scan but did not answer the underlying question: whether external drives can be automatically included in a full scan without selecting them each time.
Second, it completely ignored the second part of my question about real-time protection on external drives. Neither issue was acknowledged or flagged as something the AI could not answer.
Requesting and reaching a human agent
When I asked to speak with a human agent, the AI asked for my email address before connecting me. I provided it and was told, “One moment while I connect you to the next available expert.”
Pearl from McAfee Customer Service joined the chat within one minute.
Pearl greeted me, asked for my first and last name, and then asked for the expiration date of my subscription to verify my account. When I explained I did not have a subscription and was just enquiring, she moved forward without further verification.
I repeated both parts of my original question, including the clarification that the AI had not answered the second part. Pearl’s response was:
“Once you run a full scan, everything will be scanned if you inserted the hard drive on the laptop or desktop. The hard drive will automatically scan as well.”

This answer has two significant problems. First, it is not specific or actionable. It does not explain whether there is a setting to ensure external drives are always included, or whether it is simply automatic when the drive is connected.
Second, the second question about real-time protection covering files opened from an external drive was not addressed at all, by either the AI or the human agent, across the entire conversation.
After I acknowledged the response, Pearl asked if there was anything else she could help with and then checked whether I was still present before the session ended.
Support summary
| Support channel | Available | My experience |
|---|---|---|
| Live chat | Yes, 24/7 | Connected to AI instantly, transferred to human within one minute after providing email. Human joined quickly. |
| Phone support | Yes, 24/7 | US: 1-866-622-3911. Not personally tested for this review. |
| Email support | Yes | media@mcafee.com. Not personally tested for this review. |
| Knowledge base | Yes | Available via Help Topics in the main navigation. Not reviewed in depth for this article. |
| Community forums | Yes | Available at forums.mcafee.com. Not tested for this review. |
Verdict on support
The McAfee support experience was functional but incomplete. A few observations worth noting:
- The Contact Us page is easy to find and the available channels are clearly presented
- The AI connected quickly and attempted an answer, but only addressed one of two questions asked
- The human agent connected within one minute of requesting escalation, which is fast
- The human agent asked for account verification details even after being told I was not yet a subscriber, which added unnecessary friction
- Neither the AI nor the human agent answered the second question about real-time protection on external drives across the entire conversation
- Pearl’s answer to the first question was vague and lacked the specificity needed to be genuinely actionable
The most telling issue is the unanswered second question. A two-part question was asked clearly, twice.
Neither agent addressed the real-time protection element at any point. For a user with an actual problem that is not a minor gap. The support structure exists and connects quickly, but the depth of the responses needs work.
Is McAfee Antivirus Worth It?
McAfee sits in an interesting position in the market. At its core, it’s a well-tested antivirus with the lowest system impact of any product in the current AV-Comparatives test series. But the feature set extends so far into identity protection, financial monitoring, and scam detection that calling it an antivirus undersells what it actually is.
The strongest argument for McAfee is the combination of unlimited device coverage on the Advanced plans and the breadth of identity and financial protection features included in the base price. If you have multiple devices in your household and want a single subscription that covers antivirus, firewall, VPN, identity monitoring, credit monitoring, financial account monitoring, and scam detection without assembling separate services, McAfee Advanced covers all of that.
The areas where it falls short are worth knowing:
- The settings interface requires more clicks than competitors, and the back button behavior is frustrating
- There is no dedicated webcam protection at any plan tier
- Scan scheduling is limited compared to products like Norton and Bitdefender
- Renewal pricing is significantly higher than the first-year rate and requires active management
For users who want the lightest possible system impact combined with the broadest possible identity and financial protection, McAfee Advanced Individual is the right choice. For users who primarily want a capable antivirus at the lowest long-term cost, TotalAV or Malwarebytes will serve that need at a lower renewal price.

