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Comparison · Updated 2026

PrivacyGuard vs Norton

Norton is a full-device security suite with antivirus, VPN, identity theft protection, and a password manager. PrivacyGuard is a focused, minimal-permissions browser extension that blocks trackers and enforces data minimisation at the browser layer. These tools are complementary — this page explains when each is the right choice.

At a glance

DimensionPrivacyGuardNorton
ScopeBrowser extension — tracker blocking and data minimisationFull-device security suite: antivirus, VPN, identity, password manager
InstallationBrowser extension — minimal install footprintOS-level installation required
Permissions modelMinimal permissions — browser scope onlyElevated system access for full-device protection
Tracker blockingCore featureSafe Web and Privacy Monitor; not the primary offering
PriceFree browser extensionSubscription-based: verify at norton.com for current pricing
Privacy policyMinimal data collection by designReview at norton.com/privacy-policy
OWASP complianceBuilt to OWASP extension standardsNot applicable — different product category

Norton pricing and features vary by plan and country. Verify at norton.com.

Frequently asked questions

Is PrivacyGuard a Norton alternative?

PrivacyGuard and Norton address different layers. Norton is a full-device security suite. PrivacyGuard is a focused browser extension that blocks trackers and minimises data collection without requiring OS-level installation.

Does PrivacyGuard need fewer permissions than Norton?

Yes. PrivacyGuard uses a minimal-permissions design requesting only what is necessary to block trackers. Norton installs at the OS level and requires elevated system access.

Do I need both PrivacyGuard and Norton?

They complement each other. Norton handles device-level threats. PrivacyGuard handles browser-level privacy. Users can run both without conflict.

Add PrivacyGuard to your browser

Free browser extension. Tracker blocking. Minimal permissions.