Top 10 Best Sellers in Software – February 2026

We Track Software Sales Daily. Here’s February 2026’s Definitive Top 10.

I’ve been watching the software category like a hawk lately, and February’s numbers tell a fascinating story. Tax season drives a lot of the action, but there’s more happening here — security software is having a moment, and Microsoft’s latest Office suite is holding its ground against subscription models. The range spans from $15 fitness apps to $179 productivity suites, with over 55,000 combined reviews painting a clear picture of what actually works.

What really caught my eye this month is how practical beats flashy across the board. People are choosing proven workhorses over the latest bells and whistles, and the review patterns show they’re happy with that choice.

TurboTax Deluxe Desktop Edition 2025 takes the crown at $55.99, though that 3.6-star rating tells you something important. With 2,494 reviews and only 55% giving it five stars, this isn’t about perfection — it’s about getting the job done. The complaints usually center on needing newer operating systems (Windows 11 or macOS Sonoma minimum) and the annual purchase cycle. But for homeowners with charitable donations and medical expenses, it handles the complex stuff reliably. Just know you’re paying for desktop software that stays on your machine, not cloud-based filing.

H&R Block Tax Software Deluxe + State 2025 comes in at $35.94 with a much healthier 4.0-star rating and 62% five-star reviews. What I like here is the AI Tax Assist feature — it’s not just marketing fluff, based on what buyers are saying. The software imports from other programs smoothly, including TurboTax, which matters if you’re switching. One reviewer mentioned using it for 20 years, back when it was called “Tax Cut.” That’s the kind of longevity that builds confidence.

TurboTax Deluxe 2024 (the older version) sits at $79.99 but scores a solid 4.4 stars with nearly 15,000 reviews. Here’s the thing — 69% gave it five stars, which is significantly better than the 2025 version. Sometimes the previous year’s software is the smarter buy, especially when you’re dealing with tax prep that doesn’t change dramatically year to year. The price premium over H&R Block might not be worth it for everyone.

McAfee Total Protection for 3 devices at $24.99 represents solid value in security software. The 4.0-star rating across 6,289 reviews shows consistent performance, and the AI scam detection feature addresses today’s biggest threats. One buyer specifically mentioned no system slowdown, which has been McAfee’s historical weak point. The VPN inclusion sweetens the deal, though don’t expect enterprise-grade speeds.

Microsoft Office Home 2024 at $179.99 is the expensive option here, but the one-time purchase model appeals to people tired of subscriptions. With 65% five-star ratings, buyers appreciate getting Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote without monthly fees. The catch? It’s for one device only, so families need to do the math. Several reviews emphasize following Amazon’s installation email precisely — apparently the setup can be tricky if you deviate.

Norton 360 Deluxe for 5 devices at $24.99 offers better per-device value than the McAfee option. The 4.0-star rating with 61% five-star reviews is consistent across Norton products. The AI scam protection and dark web monitoring are genuinely useful features, not just marketing checkboxes. One long-term user mentioned staying safe despite visiting “sketchy” sites — that’s real-world testing you can’t get from lab reports.

Norton 360 Deluxe for 3 devices costs $19.99, making it the budget pick in security software. The slightly lower 3.9-star rating suggests some corners are cut, but 59% still rate it five stars. If you only need protection for a few devices and want Norton’s reputation without the premium price, this works. The main gripe I see in reviews is the auto-renewal being aggressive.

Norton 360 Premium for 10 devices at $29.99 makes sense for families or small offices. The 4.1-star rating improves with the higher tier, and buyers consistently mention decades of Norton use. At $3 per device, the math works if you actually use most of those licenses. The comprehensive protection includes everything the smaller versions offer, just scaled up.

Bitdefender Total Security for 10 devices over 2 years at $84.99 represents the premium choice. That 4.5-star rating with 73% five-star reviews is impressive, and former Kaspersky users specifically recommend it as their replacement. The Romanian servers might concern some buyers, but the protection quality is consistently praised. This is the pick for people who want set-it-and-forget-it security.

iFit Train Monthly Membership at $15 rounds out the list as the fitness software entry. The 3.3-star rating and only 47% five-star reviews suggest this one’s more niche. It’s specifically for Bluetooth-enabled equipment without built-in screens, which limits its appeal. Several reviews mention activation issues on mobile devices — you apparently need a computer to get started.

Looking at this month’s data, I’d personally go with H&R Block for tax prep (better value and ratings than TurboTax), Norton 360 for 5 devices if you need security software (sweet spot of features and price), and honestly, I’d think hard about whether that Office 2024 one-time purchase makes sense versus Microsoft 365’s subscription model. The tax software market clearly shows that newer isn’t always better — sometimes last year’s version is the smarter buy.


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