Safeguard your business-critical data with Avast Business Cloud Backup – a robust, cloud-based solution designed to protect your files, folders, and systems from accidental loss, hardware failure, cyberattacks, or natural disasters. Ideal for small to medium-sized businesses, this backup solution automatically stores encrypted copies of your data in secure offsite servers, ensuring it can be easily recovered whenever needed.
Avast Business Cloud Backup provides flexible backup scheduling, centralized management through an intuitive cloud console, and quick file restoration – whether you're protecting a single workstation or an entire network. With strong encryption, reliable cloud infrastructure, and granular control over your backup policies, it's a hassle-free way to ensure your business stays up and running even when the unexpected happens.
Pros:
- Easy remote deployment and centralized control
- Scalable for growing or multi-location businesses
- Secure, encrypted cloud storage
- Reliable data recovery helps maintain business continuity
Cons:
- Requires consistent internet connectivity for backups and restores
- Subscription-based model may not suit every budget
- Initial full backups may take time depending on data size and bandwidth
System Requirements:
| Platform | Minimum Requirements |
|---|---|
| Internet | Connection required for backup uploads, updates, and remote management |
| Windows | Windows 7–11, Windows Server 2012/2016/2019/2022 (32/64-bit), 2 GB RAM, 2 GB storage |
| Mac | macOS 10.12 (Sierra) or later |
| Linux | Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS, Red Hat (64-bit, backup agent required) |
| Browser | Latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, or Safari |
| Processor | 1.4 GHz or faster |
| Disk Space | |
| Display | Minimum 1024×768 resolution |
| Other | Administrator rights required for installation |
Why do you need backup?
With employees working from anywhere, increasing threats of ransomware, and expanding compliance needs, the risk to your business devices has never been higher. Small businesses cannot keep up and the bad guys know it! Ransomware has exploded 400% between 2018-2020. Every business, regardless of size, needs a secure, simple, and easy-to-manage device data protection solution.
5 steps to protect small businesses from ransomware
Learn how to limit ransomware and avoid downtime.
DOWNLOAD WHITE PAPER
Why Avast Business Cloud Backup?
FAST. SECURE. EASY.
Ransomware protection
Stay prepared against ransomware threats and ensure business continuity.
Secure encryption
Every file is securely encrypted, both in transit and in the cloud.
Easy to use
Back up your most critical data from anywhere. Get peace of mind that your files, folders, servers, QuickBooks, and other accounting files are safe.
Unlimited devices & retention policy
One backup plan allows you to protect as many devices as you want and keep your history for as long as you need it.
Easy management & recovery
Easy management and recovery from anywhere from our Business Hub cloud-based platform.
With growing remote workforces, increasing threats of ransomware, and expanding compliance needs, the risk to endpoints has never been higher. SMBs cannot keep up and the bad guys know it! As a result, malware and ransomware attacks have exploded. IT administrators need a backup and recovery solution they can rely on to combat these threats.
Did you know that a business falls victim to a ransomware attack every 14 seconds and the average ransom payment is $84,116? Despite these statistics, one in five SMB leaders said they do not currently have a data backup or disaster recovery solution in place. Every company needs a secure, simple-to-configure, and easy-to-manage endpoint data protection solution. Avast Business Cloud Backup safeguards your most critical business data and fulfills backup and retention requirements.
Yes. We encrypt the files before they leave your computer and encrypt them again during transit to one of our data centers, utilizing the same security technology that is used in online banking and e-commerce transactions. Your files remain encrypted on our servers, which are housed in state-of-the-art data centers that are guarded 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Avast Business Cloud Backup utilizes a powerful combination of symmetrical and asymmetrical encryption. The United States government recently approved 192-bit AES encryption as the preferred method for protecting top secret information. Our Cloud Backup solution uses an even more secure 256-bit AES encryption level. Your data is secured by this robust encryption methodology, both while being transferred offsite and also during its storage.
Furthermore, multi-factor authentication (MFA) offers an additional security layer for accessing backup data.
At minimum, scheduling cloud backups for once a week is generally considered a good practice. Depending on your bandwidth, daily or even hourly is also acceptable. If your users frequently create and modify files, you’ll want to run backups more often.
Businesses require more robust backup solutions than consumers. Security, first and foremost, is critical for businesses - not just to protect themselves and their customers, but also to comply with the standards that their customers and regulators expect. Should a data breach occur, a business needs to be able to confidently state in a court of law that it took the necessary precautions to protect user data.
Not necessarily. For many users, just backing up user files – documents, downloads, videos, etc – will suffice. If you want to restore those files to a new computer, for instance, this option is acceptable.
The initial backup will always take the longest. Subsequent backups will only upload the block level changes you make on your files, so it will run much quicker. We recommend that you run your initial backup overnight or during a weekend.
Backing up a PC to the cloud will use up some upload bandwidth, especially during the initial backup. If this is a concern, try scheduling backups overnight or during a weekend.
Local backups are usually saved to either a partition on the original computer’s hard drive or to an external hard drive. Cloud backups are saved to secure, remote servers, often with multiple copies in several geographically diverse locations (this is known as “geo-redundancy”). The latter is considered safer because local drives are just as susceptible to hardware/software failure, theft, and loss as the computers they back up. Cloud servers are much less likely to fail and can’t really be stolen.
Local drives need to be physically connected to the computer and the backup is usually run manually. Avast Business Cloud Backup is automated and runs in the background daily, hourly, etc.
Backup means copying files and folders from one location to another. Online backup means the data is transmitted from location A to location B through the internet. The files and folders stored online are an exact replica of what is stored on your local computer.
Most online backup services, after an initial setup where the user selects what files and folders to back up, are automated. That means you don’t have to manually run the backup program or upload files as you create them. The backup app runs in the background, updating your online stored files weekly, daily, or even continuously as you work.
Cloud backup, the most popular type of online backup, copies files to a remote cloud server or servers. Typically, several copies of a user’s files are stored in several locations, so even if one server fails, another is ready and waiting with the up-to-date data. The files can be accessed via a web app from anywhere in the world on any compatible computer with internet access.
Our service is currently available for Windows. MacOS is coming soon!.
No, not all file versions count against your data limit.
A Baseline file is created. Then, when the file is changed, our software calculates a Delta (the part of the file which was changed). The Delta is uploaded to our server and the newer version of the local file is cached. When a new change to the local file is applied, the second Delta is generated and uploaded to the server, and the whole local file is put to cache again.
When doing a recovery from the cloud at this stage, our software retrieves the latest Baseline + the latest Delta from the cloud and merges them.
A file is fully uploaded (a new baseline is created) when the new file is more than 50% larger or smaller than the initial baseline or the cache is cleared. We count Used Space against the data limit as a sum of MAX Baselines only.

