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CrowdStrike
crowdstrike.com › en-us › cybersecurity-101 › endpoint-security › epp-vs-edr
EPP vs EDR | CrowdStrike
February 27, 2025 - Truth: Organizations need not make a binary choice between EPP or EDR. In fact, these are two distinct capabilities that hold limited value on their own. You can think of EPP as a car and EDR as an engine — one is virtually useless without the other. Truth: EPP stands for endpoint protection platform, not passive prevention.
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Cynet
cynet.com › edr security: protecting the network from endpoint threats › epp vs. edr: what matters more, prevention or response?
EPP vs. EDR: What Matters More, Prevention or Response?
October 9, 2025 - Enable continuous endpoint monitoring across all devices While EPP focuses on passive protection, use EDR for continuous monitoring of endpoint behaviors, even those devices that appear healthy.
People also ask

How does EDR detect unknown threats?
EDR uses a combination of continuous monitoring of endpoint activity, advanced behavioral analytics, threat intelligence, and anomaly detection to uncover threats that lack known signatures. By continuously collecting telemetry from endpoints, EDR platforms can detect deviations from normal patterns. Some EDR tools also integrate with threat intelligence feeds and MITRE ATT&CK frameworks to spot tactics and techniques used by attackers, even if the exact malware strain is new.
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cynet.com
cynet.com › edr security: protecting the network from endpoint threats › epp vs. edr: what matters more, prevention or response?
EPP vs. EDR: What Matters More, Prevention or Response?
What is the primary difference between EPP and EDR?
EPP is designed to prevent known threats from compromising endpoints using tools like antivirus, anti-malware, and personal firewalls. They rely on signature-based detection and behavioral heuristics to block threats before execution. EDR focuses on detecting and responding to threats that have already bypassed preventive controls. EDR provides advanced threat hunting, incident response, and forensics by continuously monitoring endpoint activities and recording system behaviors to identify suspicious patterns or anomalies.
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cynet.com
cynet.com › edr security: protecting the network from endpoint threats › epp vs. edr: what matters more, prevention or response?
EPP vs. EDR: What Matters More, Prevention or Response?
How do EPP and EDR handle zero-day threats?
EPP tools attempt to block zero-day threats using heuristics, sandboxing, threat intelligence, and exploit prevention techniques. EDR, on the other hand, doesn’t rely on prior knowledge; it monitors how code behaves after execution. When abnormal activity is detected, EDR can alert analysts or trigger automated responses. The combination of proactive blocking by EPP and reactive detection by EDR provides a stronger defense against zero-days.
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cynet.com
cynet.com › edr security: protecting the network from endpoint threats › epp vs. edr: what matters more, prevention or response?
EPP vs. EDR: What Matters More, Prevention or Response?
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TechTarget
techtarget.com › searchsecurity › tip › EDR-vs-EPP-Whats-the-difference
EDR vs. EPP: How Are They Different and Which is Right for You? | TechTarget
The complexity of EDR tools makes them more hands-on from a management perspective. Keeping internal rules and AI/machine learning capabilities up to date can be a full-time job, so security operations center (SOC) teams should manage them. Endpoint protection platforms are cloud-based endpoint security tools that monitor for known suspicious code signatures on endpoints and flag them for analysis and action.
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SentinelOne
sentinelone.com › cybersecurity-101 › endpoint-security › epp-vs-edr
EPP vs. EDR: Understanding the Differences
October 2, 2025 - Endpoint Protection Platform secure only your network perimeter and do not let malware inside, focusing on passive protection. Whereas, Endpoint Detection Response actively tries to prevent threats from escalating or causing more damage after ...
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eSecurity Planet
esecurityplanet.com › home › endpoint
EDR vs EPP vs Antivirus: Comparing Endpoint Protection Solutions
December 10, 2024 - Endpoint protection solutions safeguard ... (AV). AV software blocks malware, EPP passively prevents threats, and EDR actively mitigates network attacks....
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Check Point Software
checkpoint.com › home › secure users & access › what is endpoint detection and response? › edr vs epp: why should you have to choose?
EDR vs EPP: Why Should You Have to Choose? - Check Point Software
May 11, 2022 - Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) and Endpoint Protection Platforms (EPP) are both powerful components of an endpoint security strategy. However, EPP and EDR are designed to address different endpoint security use cases.
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Exabeam
exabeam.com › home › edr vs. epp: what is the difference?
EDR vs. EPP: What is the Difference? | Exabeam
December 6, 2023 - Incident investigation – EDR ... analysis. Endpoint protection platforms aim to prevent traditional threats like known malware and advanced threats like fileless attacks, ransomware, and zero-day vulnerabilities....
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Redscan
redscan.com › news › epp-vs-edr-whats-the-difference
EPP vs EDR - What's The Difference?
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Red Canary
redcanary.com › cybersecurity 101 › endpoint security › epp vs. edr
EPP vs. EDR | Red Canary
June 20, 2025 - Together, they support an overall endpoint security strategy. As mentioned above, an EPP is used primarily for passive protection, while an EDR solution is proactive in its threat detection and response capabilities.
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AltexSoft
altexsoft.com › blog › endpoint-security
EPP vs EDR vs XDR: Endpoint Security Comparison | AltexSoft
January 16, 2021 - While the industry has made great progress in detection and response, EDR functionality has traditionally been provided as a point solution at one specific security layer, and benefits are limited to that layer. XDR enables detection and response in an integrated, unified platform, which can deliver much better results. Endpoints have long been a major target for attackers. Whether located in a user’s pocket, in the cloud, on IoT devices, or in an organization’s server room, the data needs to be protected both inside and outside the traditional security perimeter.
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Redpointcyber
redpointcyber.com › home › epp vs. edr: what’s the difference?
EPP vs. EDR: What’s the Difference? - Redpoint Cybersecurity
October 2, 2024 - Leveraging both EPP and EDR creates a layered defense strategy that offers comprehensive endpoint protection. EPP primarily focuses on prevention, which is essential for stopping known threats like specific pieces of malware and ransomware.
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Heimdalsecurity
heimdalsecurity.com › blog › epp-edr
EPP vs. EDR [How to Choose the Best Endpoint Protection Platform]
April 5, 2025 - These are crucial tools for protecting your company’s endpoints, which have become important with the rise in remote work. EPP solutions are proactive, whereas EDR solutions are reactive. ... It’s also worth mentioning that EPP platforms ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/sysadmin › endpoint protection - av vs edr vs mdr vs huntress
r/sysadmin on Reddit: Endpoint Protection - AV vs EDR vs MDR vs Huntress
February 9, 2023 -

We've seen quite a lot of posts lately on 'which AV should I get' or 'Huntress vs S1 vs X', so I thought as an update to my post here, I'd put together a bit more information as people seem to need something like this.

Let's start here: AV and EDR are not the same. Huntress is technically neither with their base product, their "Process Insights" product is an EDR, though. All these are the same class of thing (Endpoint Protection), but they all have very different design, and there's a fourth item - MDR/MTR. We'll go through these together.

Antivirus (say, Webroot, Norton, Intercept X, AVG, Microsoft Defender Antivirus, etc) is a no fly list. Effectively, imagine a piece of software has 'done something bad', so we don't let it run anymore. This is a list we call 'virus definitions'. For the most part, if you're on that list, you're bad, and if you're not, you're ok (from the perspective of the AV). The biggest problem with this is that something has to have been seen before, and also be classified as a direct threat, say like a virus deleting files, or a worm editing the registry.

To combat this, AV vendors came up with heuristics. These are 'indicators of badness' so to speak. Effectively, we do our best to try and analyze what something is doing and if it looks like other things we know of on our list, we block it. It's an improvement, but it's not perfect, and it's not complete enough.

Notably: Encryption is a completely normal computer activity. So is data transfer. Ransomware and data exfiltration look like both of these, and AV is effectively worthless against them. To make things worse, these are the most common software based threats nowadays, and over 75% of them (according to Sophos and Blackpoint) are only seen once.

To be blunt: AV has zero use nowadays against modern attacks and threats. It went away when Bitcoin helped monetize attackers and resource them. The threat actor industry went from cute spirals on your monitor and hackstivism to a real, $1.5 trillion business with real threats and real attackers. If you're using Webroot and you keep getting ransomware, that's why.

Enter NGAV.

Next Generation Antivirus is supposed to be the 'prevention' portion of EDR. It's heuristical analysis, ai, and machine learning. It doesn't do the detection of EDR, but it should be relatively effective against malware, fileless attacks, ransomware, and some data exfiltration (though some of those 'live off the land' attacks where nothing is downloaded, and say, Powershell is used to send data out, would benefit quite a bit from EDR. Here are writeups by Crowdstrike and Sentinel One on the topic. Though this isn't a recommendation thread, NGAV is very commonly paired with EDR, or is a literal component of it. It would be difficult to run NGAV alone, and you'd miss the benefits of EDR's monitoring.

Thank you @0Weird0 for the information on that section, his comments (correcting mine) are below in the thread, with sources.

Enter EDR.

EDR is an AI/behavioral analysis engine, for the most part. Rather than identifying 'this file is bad', it actively analyzes processes on a system and uses those metrics against its own baseline learning and cloud intelligence to determine the intent of running items to determine if they should be allowed. EDR is incredibly effective. It basically solved the ransomware problem overnight, so long as it's in use and properly configured.

Notable EDRs in no order of recommendation: Sentinel One, Sophos EDR, Crowdstrike, Carbon Black, Process Insights, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint (Please note Microsoft's extremely awful naming convention" Microsoft Defender Antivirus is the AV that comes with Windows. Microsoft Defender for Endpoint is the EDR that requires a 365 subscription.

EDR is designed to protect against ransomware, and in doing so, it was easily modified to protect against other things, like data theft, credential hijacking, malicious javascript, etc. It's fabulous at detecting things it's not seen before, which are most, if not all, modern attacks, as they're customized for their victims. It also generates a lot of data.

Enter MDR/MTR

These products are EDR with a security team monitoring them (a SOC). Most organizations don't have threat hunters, process analysts, threat experts, or remediation specialists designed to protect and monitor the absolute mountain of data that EDR provides, so manufacturers and third parties have setup teams to do just that. There are several levels of what a 'SOC' is. Huntress' is on the lower end - they'll send you an email with instructions (or a button) if something goes wrong, and isolate a machine from a network to stop a spread. Sophos, for example, is a much more involved (and thus expensive) SOC, where they'll fully remediate systems, dig into where threats came from, analyze the network, and actively call you and work tickets if need be. There are also third parties like Blackpoint that are vendor agnostic, ingesting large amounts of data from multiple sources and putting human eyes on it.

There are other SOCs too, and various other levels of involvement; this is not intended to be a recommendation, but a short list: Arctic Wolf, Microsoft Threat Experts, Sentinel One's Vigilance, Blackpoint, and Crowdstrike/Carbon Black also have their own SOCs.

Humans are very important here - from either an MSP or a single organizational standpoint, all the data in the world does nothing if you don't react. Sure, we may have stopped the ransomware with the EDR, but how did the attacker get in? What else did they do? If you're an MSP and you don't staff for this, that's normal, but if you don't know, you're doing your clients a disservice. If you're a standalone enterprise, it's your job on the line if attackers repeatedly penetrate a system. Modern threats require modern solutions.

So what's Huntress do?

Huntress looks for remnants with their core product. Footholds and 'persistence' they call it, that allow attackers back in, even if you've cleaned the initial threat. They're looking for the 'pivot and escalate' portion of an attack. They do now also have an EDR in Process Insights, and it remains to be seen how impactful that is. They're trying to compete with the popular Sentinel One/Huntress combo today.

Important edit: Andrew from Huntress has corrected me. Huntress includes Process Insights, their EDR, in all offerings now. They should be included in the EDR section, as well as the above note about persistence. Also as a note - Huntress has a stellar reputation around here. This is still not a recommendation of anything, but they don't deserve misinformation in a root post. Thanks Andrew.

So what's XDR?

Think EDR, but with getting information from other sources. It's having the telemetry from things like switches, firewalls, SIEM, Microsoft Graph, etc as well as endpoint telemetry. It's still a bit of a marketing term, since what's included with XDR is still variable from manufacturer to manufacturer, and though it absolutely is a security uplift, determining how much more secure the network is with XDR vs EDR is not standardized yet.

Hopefully this helps someone. This information is written 2/7/2023 (edited thus far on 2/8/2023 from updates in these threads) for anyone finding this on Google - security changes rapidly and it may not be accurate in the future. Also please note - no recommendations here, no "whos' better" type stuff, just a primer on endpoint protection and SOCs, hopefully.

Discuss! Below should be great discussion, eventually, on things I've missed or differing opinions. That's why Reddit is awesome.

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Xcitium
xcitium.com › edr-vs-endpoint
EDR vs Endpoint | Difference of EDR And Endpoint
Endpoint Protection Platform (EPP) is for traditional anti-malware scanning, while Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) is for more advanced features like finding and investigating security incidents and putting endpoints back to the way they ...
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Prey
preyproject.com › blog › endpoint-security-tools-epp-vs-edr
Endpoint Security Tools: EPP vs EDR
July 22, 2024 - Prevention and Detection: While EPP focuses on preventing known threats from breaching the endpoint, EDR excels at detecting and responding to threats that slip through these preventive measures.
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Cisco Blogs
blogs.cisco.com › cisco blogs › security › endpoint protection platform (epp) vs endpoint detection & response (edr)
Endpoint Protection Platform (EPP) vs Endpoint Detection & Response (EDR) - Cisco Blogs
May 11, 2022 - So given these capabilities, where do we think AMP for Endpoints falls in Gartner’s definitions and categories? AMP for Endpoints has some qualities of an EPP (as discussed above and see table below), but definitely most closely aligns to an EDR (Endpoint Detection & Response) solution.
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ClearNetwork
clearnetwork.com › home › epp vs edr: what you need to know about endpoint protection in 2025
EPP vs EDR: What You Need to Know About Endpoint Protection in 2025 EPP vs EDR: What You Need to Know About Endpoint Protection in 2025
December 17, 2024 - EPP forms the initial line of defense against common threats at the endpoint. EDR provides the additional tools needed to detect, investigate, and respond to an advanced attack. In concert, these solutions create a layered security strategy ...
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Fortinet
fortinet.com › resources › cyberglossary › endpoint-protection-platform
What Is an Endpoint Protection Platform (EPP)?
Organizations should use both EPP and EDR because EPP prevents threats before they strike, while EDR detects, investigates, and responds to incidents, thereby together delivering layered defense in depth for endpoint security.
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Fidelis Security
fidelissecurity.com › home › cybersecurity 101 › endpoint security › epp vs edr: key differences explained
EPP vs EDR: Choosing the Right Endpoint Security Solution for You | Fidelis Security
March 26, 2025 - EPP prevents threats before they enter devices, while EDR takes the detection to the next level by detecting and responding to new threats as well as threats that have bypassed initial defenses.
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NinjaOne
ninjaone.com › home › blog › security › epp vs edr: choosing the right security solution
EPP vs EDR: Which Option is Best for You? | NinjaOne
October 20, 2025 - While EPP emphasizes prevention, blocking known threats before they execute, EDR focuses on detecting and responding to advanced attacks that bypass initial defenses. Selecting the right solution depends on your organization’s unique risk ...