Transparent pricing for Linux identity security

From a fixed-fee pilot to map every privilege path, to a per-server fee for ongoing and continuous drift monitoring and assurance.

Fixed Fee Pilot

€24,000

Start with a fixed-scope pilot that maps every identity and privilege path across your Linux estate and hands you compliance-ready evidence.

  • Full Linux identity & privilege inventory — who can do what, everywhere
  • Risk-scored findings on the paths attackers exploit first
  • Compliance-ready evidence pack (NIS2, DORA, SOC 2, CIS, NIST)
  • Dedicated expert technical support and project management throughout

Then move to continuous per-server monitoring to catch drift as it happens.

Start a Fixed Fee Pilot

Continuous Linux identity monitoring — billed annually per server. Coverage scales with your estate, so every privilege path stays under watch and you only pay for the servers you protect.

Starter

from€200/ server / year

Up to 100 servers

  • Continuous identity & privilege monitoring
  • Per-account risk scoring
  • Compliance evidence exports (NIS2, DORA, SOC 2)
  • Standard support
Book a Demo
Popular

Midsize

from€75/ server / year

Up to 1,000 servers

  • Everything in Starter
  • Centralised, fleet-wide, visibility
  • Custom Active Response
  • Priority support
Book a Demo

Enterprise

Custom

Unlimited servers

  • Everything in Midsize
  • Dedicated CSM & SLA
  • SSO / SAML
  • Custom integrations & data pipelines
Book a Demo

Why LinuxGuard

Your SIEM, EDR, and cloud tools weren't built for Linux identity

Generalist security platforms watch the network, the endpoint, and the cloud — but not the artefacts that decide who can actually do what on a Linux host. Sudo rules, SSH keys, PAM chains, and orphaned service accounts live below the layer SIEM, EDR, and CSPM tools inspect — exactly where privilege drift accumulates and attackers move once they have valid credentials.

LinuxGuard was built for that layer from the ground up, not adapted from a Windows-first agent or cloud-first scanner. It maps every privilege path from the filesystem, audit logs, and PAM configuration on each host, then flags drift the moment it appears.

What generalist tools see

Network traffic, endpoint processes, and cloud configuration — the perimeter and the workload, but not the identity artefacts on the Linux host itself.

What they miss

NOPASSWD sudo entries, shared and stale SSH keys, PAM chain changes, and service accounts that outlived the workload they were created for.

What LinuxGuard adds

A continuous, host-level identity map — every privilege path enumerated, every drift event flagged, every account accounted for across your estate.

See how we compare

Ready to Secure and Optimize Your Linux Estate?

LinuxGuard is the identity-first security platform for modern Linux infrastructure — zero trust for Linux, compliance automation, and cost optimization in one expert-built solution.