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I want a SSL certificate for my web site that will not only be accepted without warning by all popular browsers (at least accepted by Firefox and Internet Explorer), but also give my visitors the green address bar.

Which certificate authority is selling the least expensive extended validation SSL certificates?

SSL EV in Microsoft Internet Explorer

SSL EV in Mozilla Firefox

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66% accept rate

10 Answers

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Totally GlobalSign

$430 per year or
$650 for 2 Years ($325/year)

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The level of security is exactly the same for all certificates EV or otherwise. EV does not increase the level of SSL encryption. EV is just a ploy to make customers trust you more by having that green bar, they all do the same thing and want as much money as they can squeeze. There is absolutely no reason you should pay more for one signing authority over another so long as they are both compatible with all of the EV enabled browsers.

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I think EV SSL certificates are more about features than price. I'd prefer to pay more for a feature rich certificate than buy a cheap one. This way my customers don't lose out. After all, its my customers who I am buying the security for, not just because I want a padlock symbol and the https:// showing without any warnings!

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I agree totally. Globalsign is a company I have used before, prices are very good, great support from them if you need it, I have recommended these to other people and not one have been annoyed when using Globalsign. You have to question GoDaddy to be able to supply an EV at that cost they must be cutting corners somewhere, wouldn't be surprised if that wasn't looked into, EV Extended Validation you couldn't even pay the member of staff to do whats involved for that amount of money, for saying it takes 4-5 days to obtain one of those. Forget the cheap and cheerful, if you want a good EV go with a company who do the job properly,

Gary

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The cheapest I have been able to find is GoDaddy! They are currently $199 and you can even find coupons on that price by searching the web for "GoDaddy coupons".

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I think Dave DuPlantis is right in that you have to consider quality as well as price. This list shows the cheapest EV SSL certificates while taking customer ratings into account.

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There are several but Instant SSL for $359 per year is one of the cheapest I've found.

You can also compare them.

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DigiCert EV Certificates

$488 per year or
$780 for 2 Years ($390/year)

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When I researched a year ago, GoDaddy was the cheapest by far. I'd start there.

GoDaddy Premium SSL (Extended Validation)

$499.99 per year or
$799.98 for 2 years ($399.99/year)

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It's dropped to like, half that. – Malfist Jun 4 at 16:21
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Avoid GoDaddy like the plague. They may be the cheapest, but this is a service, not a commodity. Find someone who's cheap that also gives good service. I would happily pay an extra 10-20% to avoid GoDaddy. – Bob Aman Oct 23 at 2:24
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Well, there is one source that says you should go with Comodo, but I would recommend that you read about the various providers before buying. Cheap may be attractive, but it isn't always the best way to go.

Comodo Instant SSL EV SSL

$449 per year or
$718 for 2 years ($359/year)

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Many people in these reviews complain of Comodo's poor service. sslshopper.com/comodo-certificate-authority-revie… – Zack Peterson Oct 30 '08 at 16:29
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I also experienced poor service from Comodo and ended up switching to Thawte. – C. Dragon 76 Oct 30 '08 at 16:42
@Zack - exactly. We've got SSL shopping on the back burner, which is why I had that site bookmarked, but it was interesting to read the reviews ... a lot of negative feedback. I know those people are more likely to post feedback, but it makes you wonder how many people liked Comodo. – Dave DuPlantis Oct 31 '08 at 14:26

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