Brave Is Charging $60 to Remove Features It Added — Is Brave Origin Worth It? (2026)

Picture of Duniya Tak Update Team  ✪

Duniya Tak Update Team ✪

🔥 Breaking — June 2026

Brave Is Charging $60 to Remove Features It Added in the First Place — Is Brave Origin Actually Worth It?

📅 Published: June 5, 2026 🕐 10 min read 🧠 Fully Updated & Verified 🇮🇳 Includes Indian Pricing
Here's the short version: Brave just launched a paid browser called Brave Origin — priced at $59.99 (roughly ₹5,000) — whose main selling point is that it strips out a bunch of features Brave itself added to the browser over the years. No AI assistant. No crypto wallet. No rewards. Just… a browser that blocks ads. People are obviously a little confused. And annoyed. Let's break it all down.

What Is Brave Origin, Exactly?

Let's start with the obvious question. Brave Origin is an official, paid version of the Brave browser that launched publicly on June 4, 2026. It's not a fork, not a third-party mod, and not some underground debloating tool. It comes straight from the Brave team themselves.

Brave has officially launched Brave Origin, a new premium version of its browser designed for users who want Brave's privacy protections without the company's growing collection of integrated features. It positions Origin as a minimalist alternative to its standard browser, removing many of the services and features added to Brave over the years while retaining its core privacy and security protections.

The browser, which Brave says now serves more than 115 million users worldwide, is built on Chromium and is known for blocking ads and trackers by default while offering optional services such as VPN subscriptions, AI tools, crypto wallet functionality, and privacy-focused search.

So in other words: Brave has 115 million users. A significant slice of those users kept asking, "Can you please just give us a clean browser without all the stuff you keep adding?" Brave's answer in 2026 is: "Yes — but it'll cost you $60."

That's the whole thing in a nutshell. And it's sparked a genuinely interesting conversation about privacy, business models, and what we expect from the tools we use every day.

What Does Brave Origin Actually Remove?

This is the part people really want to know. So here's the full list. These are the features that Brave Origin either removes entirely or disables by default:

🤖
Leo AI Assistant Brave's built-in AI chatbot — gone by default
🪙
Brave Wallet The crypto wallet and Web3 domain support
🎁
Brave Rewards & Ads The BAT token reward program and browser-based ads
📡
Brave VPN VPN promotions and the built-in VPN integration
📰
Brave News The news feed on the new tab page
🧅
Tor Integration The private Tor window option
🎙️
Brave Talk The built-in video calling feature
📖
Speedreader Reader mode for distraction-free reading
🕰️
Wayback Machine Integration with the Internet Archive
📊
Telemetry & Analytics Daily usage pings, crash logs, and P3A analytics
🔍
Web Discovery Project Anonymous data that improves Brave Search
🖼️
Sponsored Images Branded background images on the new tab page

Now here's something worth noting right away: users can "upgrade" from an existing Brave install to Brave Origin, which will disable the listed features without removing them entirely, allowing a user to re-enable features as desired. This might be useful to do, as some of the affected features (like Speedreader and Wayback Machine) are actually useful and arguably not "bloat."

Translation: Speedreader and Wayback Machine are actually pretty useful! They're in the removal list, which has caused some users to scratch their heads.

What Brave Origin KEEPS

It's not all about what's gone. Here's what stays:

✅ What Brave Origin Preserves
  • Brave Shields — the core ad and tracker blocking engine
  • Chromium security updates — regular patches from the upstream Chromium project
  • Core privacy enhancements — fingerprinting protection, HTTPS upgrades
  • Full browsing performance — same speed, same compatibility
  • All standard browser features — bookmarks, extensions, tabs, etc.

Brave Origin preserves the browser's core privacy stack, including Brave Shields, built-in ad and tracker blocking, Chromium security updates, and ongoing privacy enhancements.

Brave Origin Price — USD, INR, and Global Comparison

Let's talk money. Because this is really where the controversy lives.

🇮🇳 India (Approx.)
₹5,000
One-time fee
No localized pricing yet
USD converted at market rate
🐧 Linux
FREE
₹0
All platforms
Optional donation to support Brave
Brave has priced Origin at a one-time fee of $59.99, with a single purchase covering multiple devices and platforms through a purchase ID system. Linux users are a notable exception, as Brave is making Origin available free of charge on Linux while still allowing users to purchase it voluntarily to support development.

In Indian terms, ₹5,000 is a meaningful chunk of change. It's more than a month's worth of Netflix, Hotstar, and Spotify combined. It's nearly the price of a one-year Microsoft 365 Personal subscription. The value comparison matters a lot in the Indian context.

Brave's Other Premium Products for Comparison

Brave Product Price (USD) Price (INR Approx.) Type
Brave Origin $59.99 ≈ ₹5,020 One-time
Brave Search Premium $29.99/year ≈ ₹2,510/year Subscription
Brave VPN $99.99/year ≈ ₹8,370/year Subscription
Leo AI Premium $149.99/year ≈ ₹12,560/year Subscription
Standard Brave Browser Free Free Free forever

Interesting, right? The VPN and Leo AI are subscriptions at $100–$150 per year. Brave Origin is a one-time $60 buy. So if you were already considering a Brave subscription product anyway, the math shifts a bit.

Two Ways to Use Brave Origin

This is really important to understand, because a lot of the early confusion online came from people thinking Brave Origin was a completely separate browser that replaces Brave. It's not — well, not entirely.

There are two ways to use Origin: 1) As a standalone browser with most features outside Brave Shields disabled. 2) As an upgrade to the existing browser, with a new panel that lets you toggle features on and off.

Option 1: Standalone Brave Origin App

The first method is the dedicated, standalone Brave Origin browser. This is its own package with the features compiled out of the build entirely. This is great for purists who want the code removed completely, but you can't manually enable any features.

Think of it like getting a phone with no bloatware pre-installed at the factory level. The files are literally not there. This is especially appealing to privacy-conscious users who don't even want the code sitting dormant in the background.

Option 2: Origin Upgrade for Your Existing Brave

The second method is a paid upgrade inside the standard Brave browser. This will deliver the same Origin experience, but you gain the option to re-enable individual toggles for each feature in Settings > Brave Origin. In the opinion of many reviewers, most people should use this method as it offers more flexibility.

How to Set It Up — Step by Step

🖥️ Desktop (Windows / macOS)

  1. Open Brave and go to Settings → System → Brave Origin
  2. Click Buy Now and complete the purchase on the Brave Premium site
  3. Save your Purchase ID — you'll need this across devices
  4. Restart Brave
  5. Return to Settings and find the new Origin panel to toggle features

📱 Android / iOS

  1. Make sure you're on Brave version 1.91 or later
  2. Tap the menu (⋮ on Android / … on iOS)
  3. Go to All Settings → General → Origin
  4. Tap Buy Now via the Play Store or App Store
  5. Restart the app and use the Origin panel
💡 Good to Know

iPhone and iPad will get Origin when Brave 1.91 reaches iOS — roughly 1 to 2 weeks from the June 4 launch. So iOS users, sit tight.

How Brave Got Here: A Brief Timeline of Feature Bloat

To understand why this is controversial, you need to understand the journey Brave has been on. The browser didn't start as a crypto-AI-VPN-news platform. It started as something really simple and really good.

2016
Brave Browser launches. Built on Chromium. Core mission: block ads and trackers. Fast, private, minimal. The privacy community loves it.
2019–2020
Brave Rewards launches. The Basic Attention Token (BAT) program arrives. You earn crypto for watching ads. Interesting idea, but a lot of users just never opt in.
2021
Brave Wallet rolls out. A built-in crypto wallet. For many users, this is where the "browser is becoming a crypto product" feeling starts.
2022–2023
Brave Talk, Brave Search, News feed added. The browser is now doing video calls, serving a news feed, and running its own search engine.
2023–2024
Leo AI assistant launches. An in-browser AI chatbot powered by large language models. Also a premium subscription. The AI arms race hits Brave.
Early 2026
Brave Origin begins Nightly testing. Community response is strong. The demand for a cleaner Brave is clearly real.
June 4, 2026
Brave Origin officially launches for desktop and Android. $59.99 one-time. Free on Linux. iOS coming soon.

So there you have it. Brave built its reputation as a lean, privacy-focused alternative to Chrome, but over the years it accumulated a crypto wallet, an AI assistant, a news feed, and a rewards program. Some users liked the direction. A lot didn't.

The Real Irony: Can You Already Do This for Free?

Here's the question that's been burning up Reddit threads and tech forums. If you can already disable most of these features in free Brave, what exactly are you paying $60 for?

Some users argue the company is charging to remove features that were unwanted additions in the first place. Others point out that most of what Origin removes can already be disabled in the free version, raising questions about what the $60 actually buys.

It's a fair point. And Brave actually addresses it directly:

"Users who use the free Brave browser can also hide or disable most Brave features without getting Origin. However, the features are not compiled out of the build just by hiding them, and thus executables are not smaller, unlike the standalone Origin product," the company explained.

So the distinction is: hiding vs. removing. When you disable Leo in standard Brave, the Leo code is still in the app. It's just dormant. With the standalone Brave Origin build, that code never exists in the first place. For a security or privacy purist, that difference is genuinely meaningful — less attack surface, smaller binary, cleaner system.

Others pointed out that many of the features being removed can already be disabled in the free Brave version via enterprise group policies. Due to this, some users questioned whether Brave Origin introduces any meaningful differences beyond packaging those configuration settings into an easier-to-use interface. Defenders of the project argue that most users are unlikely to manually configure enterprise policies, making Brave Origin a more accessible way to obtain a cleaner privacy-oriented browser, while also supporting the privacy project.

💡 Key Takeaway
You're paying for 3 things: (1) a pre-compiled build with features literally absent from the code, (2) a convenient toggle panel so you don't have to dig through enterprise policies, and (3) a way to financially support Brave's development without using their monetization features.

Why Is Brave Origin Free on Linux?

This question has genuinely puzzled people, and it's one of the more interesting wrinkles in this whole story.

Brave Origin will be free on Linux, as "some Linux distros already offer a version of Brave that's similar to Origin, where various features are turned off."

Basically, Linux package maintainers in some distributions had already been shipping stripped-down builds of Brave — without the crypto and rewards features — because that's what the Linux community wanted. Brave recognized that, and instead of charging Linux users for something they could get free anyway, they made the decision to keep it free on that platform.

But here's the thing — if Brave can offer this stripped-down experience for free on Linux, it creates this odd split where one group gets the clean version at no cost, and everyone else has to pay to escape the extras.

Fair point. And it does highlight the fact that the code to do this existed. It wasn't a massive engineering undertaking to remove these features — which feeds the "we're paying to undo their choices" narrative.

Does Paying for Brave Origin Compromise Your Privacy?

This is a genuinely smart question, especially for a browser that stakes its entire identity on privacy. If you have to buy it, does Brave now know who you are and what you're browsing?

Addressing potential privacy concerns surrounding paid licensing, Brave said Origin uses a blind token protocol based on Privacy Pass. According to the company, the system allows browsers to verify that a valid purchase exists without linking product usage to a user's identity.

Brave says Origin uses blind token flows based on Privacy Pass, so payment identity and browser usage remain decoupled. In plain English: they can verify entitlement without needing to build a personal profile around your browsing activity.

So in theory, Brave knows someone paid — but doesn't know that the person who paid is you, or what you're doing with the browser. That's the Privacy Pass design. It's a well-established cryptographic protocol. That's a solid answer, though as always, you're taking the company's word for it.

⚠️ Worth Knowing: Managed Devices

There's also a workplace angle to consider. If you're using Brave on a managed device, admins can override your Origin settings. So even if you disable something, your IT department can flip it back on. If you're using a work laptop, keep this in mind.

Who Should Actually Buy Brave Origin?

Let's be real with each other. Not everyone needs this. Here's a simple breakdown:

Platform availability
Win / Mac / Linux / Android
iOS coming very soon
Device activations
Up to 10
One purchase, multiple devices
Brave users worldwide
115M+
Target for potential upgrade
Refund window
30 Days
Full refund available

Buy Brave Origin if you are:

  • An existing Brave user who has spent hours manually debloating every new device you set up
  • A privacy purist who wants features compiled out, not just hidden
  • Someone who genuinely wants to financially support Brave's privacy work without using crypto/AI/VPN features
  • A developer or IT professional who wants a clean, company-approved baseline browser
  • A person who doesn't want any telemetry — not even the privacy-preserving kind

Stick with free Brave if you are:

  • New to Brave — the free version is excellent and covers 95% of use cases
  • Someone who doesn't mind manually toggling off features once on each device
  • Someone who actually uses Leo, Rewards, or the Wallet
  • A Linux user (you get it free anyway!)
  • Someone on a tight budget — especially in India where ₹5,000 is a real cost

If you're switching from Chrome and you've never used Brave before, the free version will likely cover what you need. Origin makes the most sense for existing Brave users who want a cleaner setup from the start.

Pros and Cons at a Glance

👍 Pros

  • One-time payment, no subscription
  • Works across up to 10 devices
  • Features compiled out in standalone build
  • Zero telemetry, zero usage pings
  • Convenient toggle panel for upgrade users
  • Privacy Pass licensing = no identity link
  • Free on Linux
  • 30-day full refund policy
  • Supports Brave's open-source privacy work

👎 Cons

  • $60 (≈ ₹5,000) to remove features you didn't want
  • Most features can be disabled free already
  • Removes some useful things (Speedreader, Wayback)
  • Tor integration is removed — big deal for some
  • No localized pricing for India yet
  • iOS version not available at launch
  • Linux users get it free — feels unfair to others
  • Admin override on managed/work devices
  • Future subscription model may be added

The Indian User's Perspective

Let's talk about this from a purely Indian context, because the global tech narrative doesn't always translate here.

India is Brave's one of the biggest user bases in Asia. The privacy-conscious, tech-savvy Indian user — whether a developer in Bengaluru, a student in Pune, or a journalist in Delhi — is exactly the kind of person Brave Origin is built for. But the pricing tells a different story.

At ₹5,000 as a one-time purchase, Brave Origin costs:

  • More than 5 months of Netflix Standard (India)
  • Almost 10 months of Spotify Premium India
  • Nearly the same as a one-year Adobe Creative Cloud Individual plan in India
  • More than double a one-year subscription to Google One 100GB

Brave currently has no localized INR pricing for Origin. That's a miss. Firefox, Vivaldi, and other browsers operate entirely free — including on mobile. For Indian users who already know how to go into Brave's settings and turn off Leo and Rewards (which isn't hard), the value proposition of Brave Origin at ₹5,000 is genuinely weak.

However — and this is important — if you use Brave across 3, 4, or 5 devices (laptop + phone + work PC, which is common in India), and you hate spending 20 minutes cleaning up Brave every time you set up a new device, then the one-time ₹5,000 starts to look more reasonable.

🇮🇳 India-Specific Advice
Wait and watch. If Brave introduces localized INR pricing (like ₹999 or ₹1,499 as a one-time fee), it would be a solid deal. At current USD conversion rates, it's hard to recommend for the average Indian user who can achieve 90% of the same result for free.

Our Honest Verdict

⚖️ The Bottom Line

Brave Origin is a real product solving a real problem. The irony of paying to remove features is genuinely funny — and genuinely irritating. But once you get past the eyebrow-raising headline, the value proposition is more nuanced than it first appears.

The standalone build, with features compiled out of the binary, is something no amount of free toggle-switching gives you. For a privacy purist, that's meaningful. For everyone else? Free Brave with a few settings changes will do just fine.

The bigger issue is philosophical. Brave Origin feels like a course correction. For a while now, Brave has been trying to balance privacy with new revenue streams and experimental features. That balancing act has not landed the same way with everyone. Origin feels like an acknowledgment that maybe things drifted a bit too far.

And honestly? That self-awareness is worth something.


❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Brave Origin is an official paid version of the Brave browser, launched on June 4, 2026. It removes or disables a wide range of features that Brave has added over the years — including Leo AI, Brave Wallet, Brave Rewards, VPN, News, Talk, Tor, and telemetry — while keeping the core ad and tracker blocking via Brave Shields. It's available as a standalone app or an in-app upgrade for existing Brave users.

Brave Origin is priced at $59.99 USD as a one-time purchase. At current exchange rates (approximately ₹83–84 per dollar), this works out to roughly ₹5,000–₹5,100. There is no localized INR pricing available as of June 2026. Linux users get Brave Origin for free on all platforms.

Mostly, yes — you can manually disable most of the features that Brave Origin removes by going into Brave's settings or using enterprise group policies. However, the key difference with the standalone Brave Origin build is that the features are compiled out of the code entirely — not just hidden. This means a smaller binary, no dormant code, and a cleaner privacy posture that you genuinely cannot replicate through settings alone in standard Brave.

Brave explained that some Linux distributions already package and ship a version of Brave with many of those features turned off — because that's what the Linux community historically wanted. Rather than compete with existing free options or charge Linux users for something they could get elsewhere, Brave made Origin free on Linux. Linux users can still voluntarily purchase Origin to support Brave's development.

Brave says no. They use a blind token system based on the Privacy Pass protocol. This means the system can verify that a valid license exists, but cannot link your purchase identity to your browsing activity. Your payment is decoupled from your usage. While you're trusting Brave's implementation here, Privacy Pass is a well-established and auditable cryptographic standard.

One Brave Origin license covers up to 10 device activations. Brave has indicated that there is no strict fixed device limit, though a monthly activation rate limit applies. You can manage activations through your Brave account and request additional allocations from support if needed.

Yes. You can contact Brave support and request a full refund within 30 days of purchase if you decide Brave Origin isn't right for you. That's a solid safety net, and it makes it lower-risk to try it out.

Yes. Brave Origin receives the same Chromium security updates and privacy improvements as the standard Brave browser. The core browsing engine is not different — it's still Chromium-based with Brave Shields. You won't fall behind on security patches by using Origin.

Yes, Brave Origin removes Tor (Private Window with Tor) by default. This is one of the more controversial omissions since Tor is genuinely useful for privacy. However, if you use the upgrade version (not the standalone app), you can re-enable Tor using the Origin toggle panel. If Tor browsing is essential to your workflow, the standalone Origin app is not ideal for you — stick with standard Brave or the upgrade version.

At the time of launch, a discount code BRAVE30 was circulating in the community that reportedly provides 30% off Brave Origin. This brings the price down to approximately $41.99 (≈ ₹3,500). Always verify current discount availability on Brave's official pricing page before purchasing, as promotional codes may expire.


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