Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) remains a major therapeutic challenge and poses a significant global health threat. Developing adjuvants to enhance the efficacy of existing antibiotics represents a promising strategy to address this issue. In this study, we evaluated auranofin as an adjuvant to potentiate the activity of linezolid against MRSA. Auranofin significantly increased MRSA susceptibility to linezolid, promoted intracellular linezolid accumulation, and suppressed the emergence of MRSA resistance to linezolid. Mechanistically, auranofin inhibited the Trx/TrxR system, inducing redox imbalance and reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, which triggers DNA damage and transcriptional dysregulation. Auranofin synergized with linezolid to achieve dual inhibition of MRSA protein synthesis. Furthermore, auranofin downregulated the global regulator sarA, impaired SarA DNA-binding activity, and enhanced SarA phosphorylation, thereby attenuating SarA-mediated virulence factors (eg, adhesins and toxins) and biofilm formation. Importantly, auranofin fully restored anti-MRSA activity of linezolid in both Galleria mellonella and murine bacteremia models. Collectively, these findings identify auranofin as a promising adjuvant to linezolid and highlight its potential to improve therapeutic outcomes against invasive MRSA infections.