Complete ID Review: Really the Best Choice?

Brandon King
Editor
Last Updated November 23, 2023

It took three months of rigorous testing to create this Costco Complete ID review, and I’m now absolutely sure – there’s a much better identity protection service: Aura.

Aura offers more comprehensive identity monitoring, including things like credit monitoring, and home and auto title monitoring that Complete ID doesn’t have. Aura also comes with up to $5 million in identity theft insurance to protect your family. 

Plus, Aura secures your online experience with more digital security features, like antivirus software and parental controls.  

If you’re a loyal Costco member, Complete ID might be tempting, but Aura offers more value.

With our discount code, you can snag off your Aura subscription for life. That’s a deal not even Costco can match.

60 Day Money Back Guarantee
You Should Get Aura If…
You Should Get CompleteID If…
  • You want a service that monitors everything, from your bank accounts to your home’s title.
  • You want up to $5 million in theft insurance with a family plan – enough to cover up to five adults total.
  • You want a secure digital experience. Aura is more than identity protection, it’s comprehensive digital security, including parental controls, a VPN, and antivirus software.
  • Value matters to you. Aura offers a lot more for far less than its competitors.
  • You call yourself a Costco fanatic and insist on purchasing everything through the warehouse chain, whether or not it’s the best deal.
  • You care about quantity, not quality. Complete ID populates a lot of alerts, but many are missing crucial details.
  • You don’t want more theft insurance. Complete ID limits insurance to $1 million, regardless of your family’s size.

Aura is hands-down the superior product: It offers top-notch identity and credit monitoring & alerts, higher theft insurance, better customer support for threat resolution, and a whole list of additional services included, for free.

Did I mention that somehow Aura also comes in at a lower price than Complete ID? Imagine that: Beating Complete ID on price!

This is definitely the strangest identity theft protection service I’ve had to review and score. I’ve looked at several that treat their identity theft protection options as a side product, but most of those are already active in the consumer protection space, like Experian and Allstate.

Costco though, feels like a company that has no business being in this space. As a result, I had very little hope that this service would be any good, even though it was backed by Experian, which does give it a bit more legitimacy (even though I was not a particular fan of their IdentityWorks service).

Imagine my surprise then when my use of it turns up that the service is actually quite good, albeit flawed and limited.

All in all, it’s definitely worth considering if you are a member. Complete ID is cost-effective and has a legitimate reputation for identity theft monitoring, recovery services, and offers insurance coverage of up to $1 million. Additionally, this company provides its services at an affordable price of $8.99 a month, which is barely the cost of a decent meal. It is a well-rounded ID security package that covers most bases and won’t drain your wallet dry.

Editor’s Ranking:

Overall Score
5.0
3.0

Costco Complete ID Theft Protection Features

Monitoring and Alerts: 8/10

After the frustration of the signup process and how annoying it was to navigate the site, the monitoring tools on offer were a breath of fresh air.

In terms of breadth, there’s nothing fancy. You get the pretty standard suite of basic monitoring tools:

  • Dark web and data breach monitoring
  • Payday loan monitoring
  • Social Security number monitoring
  • Financial Bank account monitoring
  • “Neighborhood watch alerts”

Not the most robust package of tools out there, by a long shot.

But the quality of each tool is something I was surprised by. While the speed was slower than average (it took about a day for any alerts to pop up), the accuracy cannot be denied. On first logging in a day after signing up the service bombarded me with dozens of alerts laid out in the categories shown above, which can be opened in an expanded list format.

Some of this is largely fluff. I was greeted with a list of every address I’ve ever been on the lease of, which is something I’ve come to expect from these smaller services.

But the dark web and data breach monitoring overall seems top-notch, with everything I’d expected to see being represented and with a lot more detail than most services manage (which account was compromised, the name and email address of people who had used my phone number in the past, and so on).

Most of these are already dealt with, but it’s still impressive to see everything on display in a quick and easy fashion.

Likewise, I was pleasantly surprised at how good their “neighborhood watch alerts” were. This is what would generally be described in other services as sex offender and criminal registry monitoring. Usually what you get is a quick alert that a hit has been found in your neighborhood, usually with a name attached.

In this case, Complete ID provided not only a name, but a physical description and, in most cases, a synopsis of the exact offense the offender had committed to be added to the registry in the first place.

That makes Complete ID probably the best sex offender registry monitoring on the market. It’s certainly better than every other service I’ve looked at.

Still, bear in mind there is a lot it doesn’t monitor, compared to many other services out there, important things, like 401(k) and investment monitoring and Home title monitoring, amongst others.

Threat Resolution Services: 9/10

Aura
CompleteID

Expertise

  • Aura's knowdlegeable support experts answered my call within 1-2 minutes

  • Good customer service experience

US Based Support?

  • Yes

  • Yes

Customer Hours

  • 24/7/365 Support

  • 24/7/365 Support

Concierge Resolution

  • Available on ALL plans

  • Available

Lost Wallet Protection

  • Available

  • Available

The core of any identity theft protection service’s resolution package is their customer support, and Complete ID surprises once again by being one of the very few services on the market to offer 24/7 US-based customer support as part of their threat resolution.

The representatives are friendly and seem quite competent, and the availability, of course, can’t be understated as a huge positive.

The only real gripe I’d have here is that there’s nothing in particular that stands out that Complete ID offers as a unique option (for example, private investigators) but I can’t fault the service for simply being exemplary at the primary feature that determines threat resolution viability.

Theft Insurance: 8/10

Aura
costcomplteID

Theft Insurance Score

Theft Insurance 

  • Up to $5M Theft Insurance on the family plan  ($1M per adult)

  • $1M Theft Insurance per Adult on Individual & Couple plans

  • Maximum $1M Theft Insurance total on all plans

Complete ID also features a good insurance plan for all members. It has a full $1 million coverage for lost funds reimbursement (referred to as “cash recovery” in their summary of benefits) as well as expenses. However, it’s worth noting that these two things are rolled together, unlike other options. You cannot claim up to $1 million in lost funds, and also a separate $1 million in expenses.

Still, this is better than some other options offer, and likely to be more than enough for the average person. As an added benefit, Complete ID’s insurance has no monetary limits listed other than the $1 million maximum, which means you are not restricted in how much you draw for any one particular benefit. This means you could, theoretically, draw up to $1 million in just lost wages, though justifying that would be…difficult, to say the least, for most people.

The only exception to this appears to be that reimbursement for legal fees cannot exceed $125 an hour, so keep that in mind.

Ease of Use: 4/10

I do not like how Complete ID handles the layout of its website at all. The signup process for this service is a bit of a pain, being fairly lengthy and involving the use of your Costco Membership number.

You need to sign up for Costco (or renew a membership) before you sign up for Complete ID, which means you’re going to be spending a lot of time putting your information into the service.

Once signed up and logged on, things are not much better.

Have a quick look at the dashboard; what I could capture in a single image in any case:

dashboard

As you can see, it pre-adds some of your information to the signup process before you input further information. This is nice, but the way it’s presented is not.

This is one of those dashboards that does not make very good use of its space. A lot of scrolling is required to get to anything you need when instead the horizontal space could have been used to better contain the information and make it easily viewed at a glance.

The dashboard also doesn’t contain all the relevant information you might want to view. Instead, you need to navigate by this rudimentary bar of dropdown boxes at the top of the page.

header

I spent some time trying to figure out how to get back to the Alerts page after signing in for the second time. Initially, it put me right on that page before I clicked on Home to look at what else was on offer. It is actually none of these options. Instead, the way back to Alerts is shown here:

The top right corner of the page, next to your initials, has a small bell.

notification

Usually, I would associate this with system messages and the like, and it should light up if you have any notifications. It may in fact do so if anything new crops up.

However, it is also the only way to navigate back to Alerts, and that’s all it does. It doesn’t even create a standard dropdown or quick list of new alerts to view and just links back to the main page.

It’s just awful on every account, but technically functional I suppose. It does, however, lead us to something good.

Additional Services: N/A

Aura
CostcoCompleteID

Additional Services

  • VPN

  • Antivirus

  • Parental Controls

  • Password Manager

  • VPN

  • Password Manager

  • Antivirus

  • Parental Controls

This category is extremely complicated in this case and will be gone over in more detail under “Cost” below.

Suffice it to say that besides the benefits listed below, the only thing of any real substance Complete ID offers is a nice little FAQ sidebar on their dashboard:

ComplteID FAQ

It’s a very nice collection of commonly asked questions someone new to identity theft phenomena may have, and it’s good they’re so easily accessible.

Pricing Cost: 6/10

Aura
CompleteID

Promo Code

Individual Plan Cost

  • $9/month 

  • $8.99/month for Executive Members

  • $13.99/month for Business + Gold Star Members

Couple Plan Cost

  • $17/month 

Covers 2 Adults

  • $15.99/month for Executive Members

  • $25.99/month for Business + Gold Star Members

Family Plan Cost

  • $25/month 

Covers 5 adults & unlimited kids

  • $11.98/month | One Adult + Children (up to 5 children) for Executive Members

  • $17.98/month | One Adult + Children (up to 5 children) for Business + Gold Star Members

---

  • $18.99/month | Two Adults1 + Children (up to 5 children) for Executive Members

  • $29.99/month | Two Adults1 + Children (up to 5 children) for Business + Gold Star Members

Renewal Price Increased After 1st Year?

  • No. You lock in the price for life

  • No

Promo Code


I have avoided talking about one of the major drawbacks, or perhaps benefits and features depending on perspective up to this point because it wasn’t necessarily relevant to the functionality of Complete ID as an identity theft protection service.

However, it is quite relevant when it comes to analyzing the cost or perceived value of Complete ID as a service.

The issue, of course, is that Complete ID is only available as a service if you are already a Costco member. This means you cannot buy it as a completely separate service. It will always come as a package deal.

Still, for quick reference, here is how much Complete ID will run you just on its own:

In both cases, the same benefits are offered. The only difference is that a discount is applied for members with an Executive level membership as opposed to their Business or Gold Star (the basic package) membership plans.

Taken out of context, the pricing are extremely good for what you get, among the cheapest on the market. This goes especially for the price available to Executive members which is equivalent in cost to the lowest price options offered by the best Identity theft protection companies but is quite a bit better than those same service tiers and compares favorably to their middle-tier options (which often cost twice as much).

Of course, the rub is that these prices do NOT exist in a vacuum. They are only available to existing members.

This means that for the Business/Gold Star pricing plan you need to tack on an extra $60 per month, and for the Executive, you need to bump that up to $120. This means that the yearly price for your Costco membership and Complete ID combined is going to be identical no matter your Costco membership package.

This price is not at all good compared to the average market value and is very behind the curve in terms of cost. Worse, much of this price is locked in as an annual fee which cannot be truncated or negotiated. If you want to try Complete ID, you have to commit to $60 to $120 upfront before you factor in the price of the service.

Now, of course, this is ignoring all the other benefits a Costco membership can get you. It’s arguably a large money saver for many households to be able to buy in bulk at these warehouse-style stores, and I’ve enjoyed having a membership to Costco and some of its competitors with similar business models off and on throughout the years.

But it does put the service in a bit of a weird light in terms of cost or value. If you’re buying the Costco membership JUST for Complete ID…that’s pretty expensive. If you already have a Costco membership or could make good use of one and are on the fence about getting it? It’s a potentially smart choice financially.

Final Verdict

Complete ID is a service I went in expecting to hate and came out with a surprising amount of respect for. It has very good monitoring accuracy, and the detail with which each of its alerts reports to you potential problems is refreshing given how vague many other services can be.

On top of that it offers great threat resolution and a solid insurance plan, all at what on the surface seems like a great price.

However, all of this comes with a big caveat: it requires an existing Costco membership, which drives up the price and potentially the inconvenience by quite a lot.

Ultimately this service sits in a very weird spot. I’d say for Executive members it’s a no-brainer. Getting this kind of fraud protection for an additional $8.99 per month is a great deal despite the frustrations of its website layout.

For Gold Star and Business members, it’s iffier. At $13.99 a month it’s competing, and somewhat unfavorably, with other budget services like Identity Force and IDShield (which we’ve already reviewed), but does have something to speak of on its own merits that may make it tempting.

However, for those on the fence about, no interest in, or no use for a Costco membership in the first place? I’d say give it a pass. Complete ID is legit and a solid fraud protection service, but not a hot selling point for its membership as a whole.

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