Cleaner Guard

Cleaner Guard groups the usual cleaner toolkit in one app: a junk scan, a large-file finder, a photo compressor, a speaker dust-shaker, and a battery info panel. Each tool works, but each is also surface-level. For trust-conscious users, the bigger concern is the generic privacy policy and the absence of a known parent company behind the developer page.

The seven Cleaner Guard alternatives below do each of those jobs with deeper scans, recognised vendors, or both. Files by Google is the easy default. SD Maid 2 is the power-user pick. CCleaner and Norton Clean cover the brand-recognition path.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planAd-free optionMade by
Files by GoogleLight cleanup, no ads everYesYes (always)Google
SD Maid 2Power-user deep cleanerYesPro paiddarken
CCleanerClassic one-app cleanerYesPro paidGen Digital
AVG CleanerPhoto dedup + hibernationYesPro paidGen Digital
Avast CleanupCleanup + photo + batteryTrialPro paidGen Digital
Norton CleanTrusted-brand free cleanerYesAlways freeGen Digital
1Tap CleanerOne-button cache clearingYesPro paidSamatTechnology

Why people switch from Cleaner Guard

Which Cleaner Guard alternative should you pick?

  1. Files by Google for cleanup with no ads.
  2. SD Maid 2 for power-user deep cleaning.
  3. CCleaner for the classic one-button experience.
  4. AVG Cleaner for photo dedup and app hibernation.
  5. Avast Cleanup for the deepest feature set.
  6. Norton Clean for trusted-brand free cleaning.
  7. 1Tap Cleaner for a quick-tile cache clear.

1. Files by Google, cleanup with no ads

Files by Google is the cleanup tool Google ships on Pixel and Android Go. It scans junk, surfaces unused apps, finds duplicate photos and large videos, and offers a clean storage view with one-tap free-up. It weighs under 15 MB, has no ads, and integrates with Google Drive offload.

Where it falls short: no speaker cleaner, no battery info panel.

Pricing: Free.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, grant storage permission, run a scan.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the lowest-friction zero-cost replacement.


2. SD Maid 2, deep cleaning for power users

SD Maid 2 is the cleaner most enthusiasts settle on. CorpseFinder removes orphan files from uninstalled apps, AppCleaner clears caches, Storage Analyzer maps your filesystem, and Duplicates finds repeat photos. Free covers most scans; Pro unlocks scheduling and one-tap actions.

Where it falls short: dense UI with technical vocabulary.

Pricing: Free for core. Pro one-time around $10.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, grant permissions, run CorpseFinder.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the most-trusted deep cleaner on Android.


3. CCleaner, classic one-app cleaner

CCleaner has been a household name in PC cleanup since the early 2000s. The Android app covers cache scans, residual files, app analyzer, and system info. Gen Digital (owner of Norton, Avast, AVG) maintains it.

Where it falls short: free tier shows ads and pushes Pro upgrade.

Pricing: Free, ad-supported. Pro from around $2 per month.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, run scan.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the familiar brand pick if name recognition matters.


4. AVG Cleaner, photo dedup and hibernation

AVG Cleaner adds two features other cleaners often charge for: a smart photo deduper that distinguishes near-identical shots, and an app hibernation mode that freezes background activity to extend battery.

Where it falls short: ads in the free tier and partial dedup behind Pro on some plans.

Pricing: Free with ads. Pro from around $2 per month.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, grant storage and battery permissions.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: good if photo dedup and battery savers are both on your list.


5. Avast Cleanup, deepest feature set

Avast Cleanup is the broader cousin of AVG Cleaner. The two share an engine; Avast adds a photo backup, storage analyzer, and battery saver. It is the most feature-dense cleaner in this list.

Where it falls short: limited free trial. Strong upsell pressure.

Pricing: Trial. Pro from around $2 per month.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, grant permissions, expect at least one upsell screen.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the all-in-one pick if you accept the upsells.


6. Norton Clean, trusted-brand free cleaner

Norton Clean is the rare cleaner from a major security vendor that is fully free with no ads. It scans junk, finds duplicates, and exposes an app manager. Light, fast, no upsell screens.

Where it falls short: no scheduled scans or deep analysis. Infrequent updates.

Pricing: Free.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, run scan.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: the best brand-name free cleaner with no ads.


7. 1Tap Cleaner, one-button cache clearing

1Tap Cleaner does one job well: it clears all app caches with a single tap from a home-screen widget. It also clears the call log, browser history, default app preferences, and the clipboard on demand.

Where it falls short: Android 6+ revoked the privileged cache permission, so the app now opens the per-app cache screen and asks you to confirm.

Pricing: Free, light ads. Pro one-time around $3.

Migrating from Cleaner Guard: install, add the widget.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: a focused tool for users who clear cache often.


How to choose

FAQ

Do cleaner apps damage my phone?
Reputable cleaners do not. They delete files Android has flagged as cache, residue, or duplicates. The risk comes from aggressive "boost" features that force-stop apps repeatedly, which can degrade battery life. Stick to scans and manual review.

Is Files by Google enough?
For most users, yes. It covers junk cache, large files, duplicates, and unused apps. Add SD Maid 2 only if you regularly install and uninstall apps and want to clean residual folders.

What does a speaker cleaner app actually do?
Speaker cleaner apps play a specific low-frequency tone that vibrates the speaker membrane to dislodge dust. It is more theatre than science, but it is harmless. Most modern cleaners ship it as a marketing feature.

Are phone cleaner apps a privacy risk?
Cleaners request broad permissions (storage, accessibility, sometimes contacts). The risk depends on the publisher. Cleaners from Google, Norton, Avast, and AVG are trustworthy. Generic small-developer cleaners with no parent company should be approached with caution.