Start with Identity
IAM

SecureAuth

Founded 2005Irvine, California, USAPrivateScore 4/5Evaluated 2026-07-03Website ↗

Capability scores

Methodology →
Authentication
4.5
SSO & Federation
4.0
Authorization
3.5
Lifecycle & Provisioning
3.0
MFA & Passwordless
4.5
Governance & Audit
3.5
Developer Experience
3.0
Deployment Flexibility
4.0
Pricing Transparency
3.0
Support & Ecosystem
3.5

Scored 0–5 against a published rubric. Independent analysis, no vendor sponsorship.

Overview

SecureAuth is an access management vendor focused on adaptive, risk-based authentication for both workforce and customer identities. Its platform combines SSO, MFA, passwordless, and continuous risk analysis, with flexible deployment.

What it is good at

Its strength is adaptive authentication: analyzing device, location, behavior, and threat signals to apply the right level of assurance, including passwordless options, and doing so continuously rather than only at login. It supports flexible cloud and hybrid deployment, appealing to enterprises with mixed environments and strong security requirements.

Where it falls short

Its integration network and brand reach are smaller than the market leaders, and it is less developer-first than the cloud-native platforms.

Pricing

Quote-based enterprise pricing.

Best for, and who should look elsewhere

Choose SecureAuth for risk-based, adaptive authentication across workforce and customers with flexible deployment. Look elsewhere for the largest ecosystem (see Okta) or a developer-first cloud platform.

Bottom line

A capable adaptive-authentication specialist, strong on continuous risk and passwordless for mixed enterprise environments.

By SWI Community Team · Last evaluated 2026-07-03

Independent, community-driven analysis. No vendor sponsorship. Compiled from public research and community input and verified on a best-effort basis, so details may be incomplete or out of date. Scores are opinions, not advice. Trademarks belong to their owners; mention does not imply affiliation or endorsement. See the full disclaimer, or send corrections to [email protected].