How to Remove Alumics Service

Home ยป Trojan ยป How to Remove Alumics Service

If you recently noticed a file or process named Alumics Service in your system, especially if you’ve recently installed some new app with questionable origins, then you should stay on this page to learn how to get rid of it.

Alumics Service is actually a rogue software with Trojan Horse characteristics, which means you should do everything you can to get rid of it ASAP. Alumics Service, similar to Altrusis Service, Altruistics and Altrusica Service, plants rogue Registry entries, drops helper files in odd directories, and sets scheduled tasks so it resurrects after you think itโ€™s gone.

From there, it pivots to data theft, cryptomining, phishing pop-ups, and even pulling more payloads via a loader component similar to Legion. The longer it stays in your PC, the more problems it can cause, so don’t waste time and get down to removing it now.

The guide you’ll find below details each step you must perform to remove the malware, but in case you don’t feel confident manually tinkering with your PC, I can recommend SpyHunter 5. It’s a powerful removal tool that can help you eliminate Alumics Service in just a couple of clicks.

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Alumics Service Removal Guide

Start with the easiest option: try removing Alumics Service with Windowsโ€™ built-in uninstall tools before deeper cleanup. This initial pass is safe and quick; even partial removal reduces clutter and makes advanced steps more effective.

Quick removal of Alumics Service using Apps & Features

15 mins
    Quick removal of Alumics Service using Apps & Features1

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    1.1
    Begin where removal controls live if Alumics Service is installed: open the Start Menu, choose Settings, and access the central panel for apps and system preferences.
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    1.2
    In Settings, open Apps. This list shows all installed items and lets you filter by name, size, or install date to highlight recent changes.
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    1.3
    Switch the sort to Installation date so the newest entries appear first. Unfamiliar additions are easier to spot and verify this way.
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    1.4
    When you find a suspect program, select it, click Uninstall, and complete the prompts. Allow the uninstaller to remove related components and avoid interrupting it.
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    1.5
    Afterward, browse to C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Programs. Look for leftover folders or binaries the uninstaller missed and note any unusual names.
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    1.6
    If a leftover folder remains, delete it manually. Then restart Windows to release file locks and confirm nothing attempts to launch at boot.

After you restart, check whether the program no longer appears. If traces remain, that is common with persistent threats; continue with the deeper actions below to remove hidden components and stop relaunch points.

SUMMARY:

Name Alumics Service
Type Trojan
Detection Tool
Complete Alumics Service Virus Removal video

How to Fully Get Rid of Alumics Service

If processes are running right now, you can examine paths and triggers in real time. With Alumics Service active, its files and startup hooks are accessible in memory and on disk, allowing you to trace locations and remove persistence without guesswork.

1. Preparing for the Alumics Service Removal

15 mins
    Preparing for the Alumics Service Removal1

  1. 1
    1.1
    folder options htr
    Visibility first helps expose Alumics Service leftovers. Search for Folder Options from the Start Menu, open it, switch to the View tab, and enable Show hidden files, folders, and drives. Revealing hidden items uncovers common stash points for unwanted components.
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    1.2
    Locked files can block progress, so install LockHunter to remove items Windows reports as in use. This small utility is free, ad-free, and requires no registration; setup is quick. It integrates with the context menu to identify locks and delete stubborn executables or DLLs safely.

We understand if you prefer avoiding third-party utilities and we keep most steps hands-on. In stubborn cases, this tool helps remove files Windows marks as in use, which is sometimes necessary.

LockHunter is free, ad-free, and does not require registration. Downloading and installing it takes only a couple of minutes.

Remove Alumics Service Processes From the Task Manager

Stopping a single process is not enough. Components often plant startup items, scheduled tasks, and helpers that relaunch them. The steps below help you find the running executable for Alumics Service, remove its files, and then shut down the process cleanly.

2. Terminate suspicious Alumics Service processes and remove their files

15 mins
    Terminate suspicious Alumics Service processes and remove their files1

  1. 1
    2.1
    Context is crucial when tracking Alumics Service activity. Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager and review running processes and resource use.
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    2.2
    If the compact view appears, click More details. The expanded view lists background processes, publishers, and startup impact for easier evaluation.
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    2.3
    example suspicious process
    Sort by CPU or Memory and look for unfamiliar names or unusual usage. Malicious processes rarely advertise themselves plainly.
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    2.4
    Right-click a candidate and choose Open file location. Reviewing the directory and publisher helps you judge legitimacy quickly.
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    2.5
    Attempt to delete the hosting folder. If Windows blocks removal, run LockHunter, select Whatโ€™s locking this file?, release the lock, and remove the file and its folder from within the tool.
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    2.6
    Back in Task Manager, choose End task on the same process. Ending it after deleting the binary reduces instant restarts and stabilizes the system for the next steps.

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Delete Alumics Service Virus Files

Many intrusions rely on logon launches and scattered helpers across user and program folders. Clearing these locations cuts off relaunch attempts and removes scaffolding that might restore components tied to Alumics Service.

3. Purge startup and program folders related to Alumics Service

15 mins
    Purge startup and program folders related to Alumics Service1

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    3.1
    Start with common relaunch paths used when Alumics Service attempts to restart: C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup and C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup. Remove unknown shortcuts or executables.
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    3.2
    Inside each Startup folder, keep desktop.ini and delete other suspicious items. If deletion fails, use LockHunter to unlock and remove them safely.
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    3.3
    Check main program locations next – C:\Program Files and C:\Program Files (x86). Remove newly created, empty, or oddly named folders unrelated to software you trust.
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    3.4
    Review user-level paths too: C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\, C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Programs, and C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs. These commonly hold launchers, updater stubs, or scripts.
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    3.5
    delete temp files
    Clear temporary files: open C:\Users\YourUsername\AppData\Local\Temp, press Ctrl + A to select all, delete the contents, and empty the Recycle Bin.

Get Rid of Alumics Service Scheduled Tasks

Scheduled items can quietly restart Alumics Service even after you delete its files. Review tasks methodically to learn what triggers run, where the payload sits, and whether it lives under user-space paths. Removing both the scheduled entry and its referenced file is essential to prevent the threat from returning after reboots or logons.

4. Disable scheduled tasks that relaunch the Alumics Service app

15 mins
    Disable scheduled tasks that relaunch the Alumics Service app1

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    4.1
    task scheduler
    Open Task Scheduler to find triggers that may restart Alumics Service. Search from the Start Menu, launch it, and expand the Task Scheduler Library to view tasks for your account and system folders.
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    4.2
    Double-click a task to open Properties. Review Actions to see the command or file that runs and any parameters supplied.
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    4.3
    Prioritize tasks that reference user directories like AppData or Roaming, especially unfamiliar names. Odd locations for trusted vendors warrant closer inspection.
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    4.4
    When a task is illegitimate, copy the full path from Actions, then delete the task in Task Scheduler to stop automatic execution.
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    4.5
    Browse to the copied path and remove the referenced executable or script. Deleting both the task and its payload prevents re-creation after a reboot.
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    4.6
    Repeat the review for every folder under the Task Scheduler Library, including subfolders created by installers. Persistence often hides behind generic names.

Uninstall the Alumics Service Malware App Through the Windows Registry

Even after cleanup, remnants tied to Alumics Service can linger in Registry autostart locations and policy-based runs. Remove only entries you identify as unwanted, leaving legitimate services intact. Targeting precise values – not whole keys – prevents accidental disruption while ensuring relaunch hooks and leftover references are fully cleared.

5. Remove Alumics Service leftovers via Registry Editor

15 mins
    Remove Alumics Service leftovers via Registry Editor1

  1. 1
    5.1
    Open Registry Editor to expose autostart data that may sustain Alumics Service: press Win + R, type regedit, and press Enter.
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    5.2
    Press Ctrl + F and search for the exact name of the app you removed earlier. This often finds orphaned keys like services or shell extensions.
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    5.3
    When a match is found, select the key in the left pane and delete it. Continue with F3 until no further entries remain across all hives.
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    5.4
    Repeat the search-and-delete cycle for other questionable apps identified during earlier steps. Removing their traces blocks helper services from restoring components.
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    5.5
    Run one final search for the exact threat name. Deleting a lingering value or path reference can stop files from being recreated after startup.
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    5.6
    Manually inspect these commonly used paths for autostarts and policy runs:
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce
    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\Run
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServices
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunServicesOnce
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RunOnce\Setup
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services
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    5.7
    In each path, look in the right pane for values that point to unknown executables or suspicious directories. Delete the specific value only to avoid impacting valid components.

Finish by restarting Windows. Confirm normal startup, verify there are no pop-ups or relaunches, and make sure browsers and apps behave normally. If anything persists, use an offline scanner to check for hidden drivers, repair altered settings, and confirm no scheduled tasks remain.