Webroot 75% Black Friday Discount

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https://webroot.com
Event start
Nov 29, 2025
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Use code: WSACM75
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Divine_Barakah

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Webroot on sale now

The Internet Security Plus 1 year for 3 devices is for $17.5 Screenshot_20251129-173140.png
 
Webroot on sale now

The Internet Security Plus 1 year for 3 devices is for $17.5View attachment 293343
Nice catch, that’s a pretty big discount.

What you’re getting
  • Webroot Internet Security Plus
  • 1 year / 3 devices
  • Promo code WSACM75 applied for 75% off
  • Comes down to about $5.80 per device for the year

Things to double‑check before you buy
  • Renewal price – Webroot (like most vendors) usually renews at the full price, not the promo price. Check if you can turn off auto‑renew in your account after purchase if you don’t want that.
  • Region / taxes – Final price can change slightly with VAT/sales tax.
  • Extras – You probably don’t need the “Add software CD” or Webroot PC Optimizer. The optimizer type tools rarely add much and can sometimes cause issues.
  • Trial / refund – The 70‑day money‑back guarantee shown there is useful if you want to test it for a while on one device before committing to all three.

Is it worth it?
  • If you already like Webroot’s light footprint and cloud approach, this is a good price for a legit license.
  • If you’re choosing an AV from scratch and care a lot about recent independent lab scores, you may want to compare with other suites as well, since Webroot hasn’t been among the top performers in many recent tests.

Overall, for existing Webroot users or as a cheap extra license, $17.50 for 3 devices is a solid deal—as long as you keep an eye on the renewal terms.
 
Nice catch, that’s a pretty big discount.

What you’re getting
  • Webroot Internet Security Plus
  • 1 year / 3 devices
  • Promo code WSACM75 applied for 75% off
  • Comes down to about $5.80 per device for the year

Things to double‑check before you buy
  • Renewal price – Webroot (like most vendors) usually renews at the full price, not the promo price. Check if you can turn off auto‑renew in your account after purchase if you don’t want that.
  • Region / taxes – Final price can change slightly with VAT/sales tax.
  • Extras – You probably don’t need the “Add software CD” or Webroot PC Optimizer. The optimizer type tools rarely add much and can sometimes cause issues.
  • Trial / refund – The 70‑day money‑back guarantee shown there is useful if you want to test it for a while on one device before committing to all three.

Is it worth it?
  • If you already like Webroot’s light footprint and cloud approach, this is a good price for a legit license.
  • If you’re choosing an AV from scratch and care a lot about recent independent lab scores, you may want to compare with other suites as well, since Webroot hasn’t been among the top performers in many recent tests.

Overall, for existing Webroot users or as a cheap extra license, $17.50 for 3 devices is a solid deal—as long as you keep an eye on the renewal terms.
And let's not forget that Webroot Internet Security Plus come with Lastpass, so it is a good deal.
 
Webroot's AV protection is probably middle of the road, there are other AV's I would recommend before it , what Webroot REALLY needs to bring back is Windows Washer, one of the best cleaning tools for Windows I have ever used and they yanked it for no apparent reason. With CCleaner going down the tubes , they'd make a killing.
 
Webroot's AV protection is probably middle of the road, there are other AV's I would recommend before it , what Webroot REALLY needs to bring back is Windows Washer, one of the best cleaning tools for Windows I have ever used and they yanked it for no apparent reason. With CCleaner going down the tubes , they'd make a killing.
I have used Webroot in the past and I liked the fact that it was too lightweight and I believe it still is. As for protection, I think using it with a good adblocker with secure DNS and careful browsing habits will make it less likely for you to get infected.

Regarding cleaners, I believe Kerish Doctor is one of the best cleaners ever made. It receives regular updates to its algorithms and their support is amazing.
 
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I still don't know if they have solved the issues I had when I did use it some time ago which was despite WR bragging about the minute size of its installer, the hugely gigantic+++ WRDATA files (monitoring) that built up if you used anything other than mainstream products - Back them I used Pale Moon with each & every update I had to scan & send to WR support unknowns files so they could whitelist them - Frankly: I always thought that was the job of the AV company to keep up? In the end I gave up with WR + the forum at that time was like a brush with the grim reaper himself should you ask a question or say anything other than 'Webroot is amazing' & it just works differently.

I never did see how you can 'Rollback' data that has escaped from your system into the ether, you cannot? This is from a few years back but has this changed? I'm not going to comment on WR again as it could be interpreted as trolling. I started using WR as it was as I remember it was an offshoot of Prevx which was developed not a million miles from here & I used for sometime without issue, though hundreds of years ago it seems.
 
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Webroot 75% Black Friday Discount—"empty wallet, infected system"—this deal proves the buyer's smarts! 😊
Well, so may you think, and virtually everyone on this forum as well, but no-one has yet given me a satisfactory answer as to how, over a period of many years, I was getting regularly infected and had to call in my IT man who intervened on each occasion to clean up the infection, and guided me to various different reputable AVs, none of which resolved my problems. But since moving to Prevx/Webroot in November 2006, I have never knowingly been infected.

I'm still waiting for a reasonable explanation for this. My explanation is that, despite all the cogent arguments to the contrary, in real life Webroot actually does work remarkably well, at least on all my devices (and I know several others who have had somewhat similar experiences).

As for @Sorrento, I do understand what you say and cannot completely disagree with you. But if your experience with the Webroot forum felt like "a brush with the grim reaper", I can only say that mine here felt like being hunted by ravenous wolves LOL until the moderators finally cottoned on and a couple of brief words on their part had astonishingly instant results :oops: !
 
I'm still waiting for a reasonable explanation for this. My explanation is that, despite all the cogent arguments to the contrary, in real life Webroot actually does work remarkably well, at least on all my devices (and I know several others who have had somewhat similar experiences).
Maybe you just have very good computer security hygiene and practice safe computing? Or may Webroot really does work that well that it's protected you up until now!

We will never know, we can just form our opinions on tests and user experiences which have shown Webroot is not the best protection you can buy

In the end if you like it then you do you, you don't need validation or your ego stroked from randoms on the internet, but.you have to admit you could be wrong.
 
Well, so may you think, and virtually everyone on this forum as well, but no-one has yet given me a satisfactory answer as to how, over a period of many years, I was getting regularly infected and had to call in my IT man who intervened on each occasion to clean up the infection, and guided me to various different reputable AVs, none of which resolved my problems. But since moving to Prevx/Webroot in November 2006, I have never knowingly been infected.

I'm still waiting for a reasonable explanation for this. My explanation is that, despite all the cogent arguments to the contrary, in real life Webroot actually does work remarkably well, at least on all my devices (and I know several others who have had somewhat similar experiences).

As for @Sorrento, I do understand what you say and cannot completely disagree with you. But if your experience with the Webroot forum felt like "a brush with the grim reaper", I can only say that mine here felt like being hunted by ravenous wolves LOL until the moderators finally cottoned on and a couple of brief words on their part had astonishingly instant results :oops: !
No worries. Since Webroot is working well for you, don't miss the deal. I do remember there were two users on MT who shared your experience that makes three of you so why not.
 
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But since moving to Prevx/Webroot in November 2006, I have never knowingly been infected.
I'm still waiting for a reasonable explanation for this. My explanation is that, despite all the cogent arguments to the contrary, in real life Webroot actually does work remarkably well,
well @Shadowra tested Webroot a couple months ago, and it was not recommended. So less than optimal Webroot plus your good online hygiene & perhaps some luck accounts for your not being infected. And it seems it is possible to be infected no matter what AV you use.

 
Well, so may you think, and virtually everyone on this forum as well, but no-one has yet given me a satisfactory answer as to how, over a period of many years, I was getting regularly infected and had to call in my IT man who intervened on each occasion to clean up the infection, and guided me to various different reputable AVs, none of which resolved my problems. But since moving to Prevx/Webroot in November 2006, I have never knowingly been infected.
It's just an opinion with light humor. You use what you find suitable and efficient. I know many people who have been using just Microsoft Defender for years with no issues or infection.
 
As I've never (as far as i am aware) been infected badly in 30 odd years & used almost every AV in the known universe, I'm not sure which AV protected me, maybe, maybe it was down in some part to myself? However that too is conjecture.
 
It's just an opinion with light humor. You use what you find suitable and efficient. I know many people who have been using just Microsoft Defender for years with no issues or infection.
But seriously, how do you judge that your device is not infected when using the said product? By running second-opinion scanners?
 
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