How to Prevent Ransomware Attacks
Ransomware can be prevented through a combination of email security, multi-factor authentication, patch management, endpoint protection, and isolated backups. No single control prevents all ransomware, but the right combination makes a successful attack significantly less likely — and recovery far faster if one does occur.
Direct Answer
Ransomware is prevented through layered controls: advanced email filtering to block malicious attachments and links, MFA to stop credential-based access, patch management to close exploitable vulnerabilities, EDR to detect ransomware behaviour before encryption spreads, and immutable offsite backups for recovery without paying a ransom. No single control is sufficient. AMVIA deploys this full stack for UK SMEs as a managed monthly service.
The Key Controls That Prevent Ransomware
These are the most effective measures for reducing ransomware risk, in order of priority.
Email Filtering and ATP
Advanced threat protection scans attachments and links in real time. DMARC and DKIM controls reduce the likelihood of spoofed emails reaching your staff.
Multi-Factor Authentication
MFA prevents compromised passwords from being used to access accounts. It is the single most effective control against credential-based attacks.
Patch Management
High and critical patches applied within 14 days prevent attackers exploiting known vulnerabilities. Unsupported software must be removed or isolated.
Endpoint Detection and Response
EDR tools detect ransomware behaviour — mass file encryption, unusual process activity — and can terminate the process before significant damage is done.
Immutable Offsite Backups
Backups stored in an isolated environment that cannot be accessed or modified by ransomware are the primary recovery path. They should be tested regularly.
Security Awareness Training
Staff who can recognise phishing emails are less likely to trigger an infection. Simulated phishing campaigns help identify and train the most vulnerable users.
Basic Antivirus vs Full Ransomware Protection Stack
Why antivirus alone is insufficient, and what a layered ransomware defence looks like.
| Feature | Antivirus OnlySignature-based | Layered ProtectionFull ransomware defenceRecommended |
|---|---|---|
| Known malware blocked | ||
| Phishing emails filtered | ||
| MFA enforced on all accounts | ||
| Behavioural / ransomware detection | ||
| Patches managed and enforced | ||
| Immutable backup for recovery | ||
| Staff phishing training |
Ransomware strains are increasingly capable of disabling or bypassing signature-based antivirus. Behavioural detection via EDR is a more robust layer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ransomware is malicious software that encrypts your data and demands payment for its return. Approximately 19,000 UK businesses were hit by ransomware in 2025. The median UK ransom demand has doubled to $5.37 million, and average recovery costs reach $2.58 million excluding the ransom itself.
Organisations with Cyber Essentials certification are 92% less likely to make a claim on their cyber insurance. Certification is mandatory for UK government contracts involving sensitive data. Only 3% of UK businesses are currently certified, giving certified businesses a competitive advantage.
The average cost of the most disruptive breach is £3,550 for UK businesses. For businesses that experienced negative outcomes such as data loss or financial theft, the average cost rises to £8,260. Medium and large businesses face average costs of £10,830 per disruptive incident.
Only 14% of UK businesses formally review cyber risks from their immediate suppliers. 35.5% of all global data breaches in 2024 originated from third-party compromises. Supply chain attacks add an average of £241,620 to the total cost of a breach and take 267 days to detect and contain.
43% of UK businesses experienced a cybersecurity breach or attack in the past 12 months, according to the DSIT Cyber Security Breaches Survey 2025. For medium-sized businesses, this figure rises to 67%. Phishing remains the most common attack type, affecting 85% of businesses that reported a breach.
Reduce Your Ransomware Exposure Today
AMVIA can deploy a layered ransomware prevention stack for your business, including email security, MFA, EDR, and immutable backup. Speak to our team to get started.
Related Questions
What Is Ransomware?
How ransomware works, how it spreads, and what the financial impact looks like for UK businesses.
What Is Phishing?
Phishing is the most common ransomware delivery method — and how to defend against it.
Email Security and Phishing Protection
Advanced email filtering that blocks malicious attachments and links before they reach your staff.
Endpoint Security Service
EDR-based protection that detects ransomware behaviour and terminates it before encryption spreads.