Do You Actually Need Antivirus in 2026?
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The Honest Starting Point
Windows Defender — the antivirus built into Windows 10 and 11 — is genuinely good now. Microsoft has invested heavily in it over the past five years. In 2023 AV-TEST evaluations, it scored 6/6 for protection, 5.5/6 for performance, and 6/6 for usability.
So: do you still need to pay for antivirus? It depends on who you are and how you use your device.
When Windows Defender Is Enough
You probably do not need third-party antivirus if:
- You keep Windows updated automatically
- You only download software from official sources (Microsoft Store, developer websites)
- You do not click links in emails without verifying the sender
- You use a modern browser (Chrome, Firefox, Edge) with phishing protection enabled
- You do not have children using the device
- You do not use the device for work with sensitive data
When You Need More Than Defender
You should consider third-party antivirus if:
You have children using the device. Children click things adults would not. They download games from unverified sources. Parental controls and stronger real-time protection matter.
You frequently download files from the internet. Torrents, software cracks (please do not), freeware from random sites — the risk surface expands significantly with each download.
You run a home business. Client data, financial records, contracts — these warrant better protection than the built-in minimum.
You want active threat hunting. Defender protects against known threats. Products like Bitdefender actively monitor behaviour for signs of zero-day attacks before signatures exist.
You use macOS. Built-in macOS protections (Gatekeeper, XProtect) are real but limited. Mac malware is less common but absolutely exists, and Apple's built-in tools do not match what Bitdefender or Malwarebytes add.
The Free Solution
If you are on the fence, start with Malwarebytes Free. It does not offer real-time protection, but it is the best on-demand scanner available. Run it monthly. It will catch things Defender missed.
This is not a substitute for real-time protection if you are in a risk category above, but it is significantly better than nothing for the cost of zero.
The Bottom Line
Defender is not enough for everyone, but it is enough for careful users. Know your risk profile. If in doubt, Malwarebytes Premium at $39.99/year is a low-cost way to add a meaningful layer of protection.
Written by Øyvind — NorwegianSpark SA.
Reviewed by Øyvind — NorwegianSpark · Last updated: 22 March 2026