Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Identity Armor is a cybersecurity and credit protection service focused on identity theft protection. Its website emphasizes that it has been protecting U.S. users since 2014 and positions the service as “360° protection.” It is not a traditional enterprise firewall or cloud security platform; instead, it provides ongoing monitoring and assistance around personal digital identity, credit files, endpoint devices, and data breach risks.
In terms of protection coverage, Identity Armor includes an identity protection monitoring dashboard, dark web monitoring, credit monitoring across the three major credit bureaus, credit score and credit history monitoring, USPS address change monitoring, credit lock security services, and antivirus protection for PCs, tablets, smartphones, and other devices. Its Sentry Program focuses on locking credit files when a digital identity is stolen, helping prevent fraudulent credit cards, loans, or mortgage applications opened in the victim’s name. The service also includes U.S.-based PC/Mac security advisors, credit and identity threat advisors, one annual report from the three major credit bureaus, as well as stolen wallet assistance, emergency cash, lost wage reimbursement, and up to $1 million in identity theft recovery insurance.
The crawled content shows site entries or plan names such as Plans, Pricing, Gold Family, and Platinum Member, but no specific prices are disclosed, so cost transparency is limited. The scope of applicability is very clear: Identity Armor only applies to US residents living in the US with a Social Security Number. This means its credit bureau monitoring, SSN-related identity protection, and insurance terms are highly dependent on the U.S. institutional environment.
The main advantage is relatively comprehensive coverage, spanning breach detection, dark web monitoring, credit monitoring, credit locking, and identity recovery support, with phone support and U.S.-based advisors included. It is well targeted at U.S. individuals or families concerned about the impact of data breaches involving Equifax, Yahoo, LinkedIn, and similar incidents. The downside is that the website uses strong marketing terms such as “bulletproof” and “impenetrable,” while the footer also states that not all identity theft can be prevented. It also does not disclose compliance certifications, APIs, enterprise integrations, specific SLAs, or technical architecture, making it unsuitable for evaluation as an enterprise security operations platform.
Identity Armor is better suited to U.S. residents and household users, especially those concerned about credit fraud, SSN exposure, dark web exposure, and post-breach remediation. Even if users in China can access the website, the practical value is limited without a U.S. SSN, access to the U.S. credit system, and eligibility for the relevant payment and insurance conditions. The China access status cannot be determined from the reviewed content and is therefore marked as unknown. Comparable U.S. alternatives include LifeLock, Experian IdentityWorks, and Aura, while in mainland China users more often rely on bank risk-control alerts, credit reporting services, carrier security notifications, and anti-fraud tools.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on identityarmor.com official site.
identityarmor.com is an United States Security provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach identityarmor.com directly.