All certifications issued by CompTIA expire 3 years after obtainment, reissuance requires repurchase and retesting. However, certifications issued prior to January 1, 2011 do not expire. Almost all certifications have accreditation from the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) on dates valid from 2008 till 2028 available on the ANSI website.
Certifications •
Tech+: covers foundational IT concepts and terminology of the industry. It is considered the first step toward the A+ or Network+ certifications. ITF+ (IT Fundamentals) was replaced by Tech+. •
A+: represents entry-level competency as a
computer technician and covers various technologies and operating systems. •
Network+: Used to measure skill as a Network Technician. •
Security+: security certification that builds off of the network security knowledge covered by the Network+ certification. •
Cloud+: both cloud computing and virtualization. Maps to DOD 8570 Standards. •
Cloud Essentials: a pathway to the
Cloud+ credential. •
CySA+: Cybersecurity Analyst; The certification focuses on cyber-threat detection tools and analysis to identify vulnerabilities and risks. In January 2018, the certification was renamed from CSA+ to CySA+ as a result of a trademark dispute. •
Data+: focuses on data mining, manipulating data, visualizing & reporting data, statistical methods, and governance. •
Linux+: A single exam known as XK0-004 that is renewable through the CE program, the certification covers
Linux operating systems, from their installation and use to the basics of applicable
free software and
open source licenses. Was formerly a two-part exam LX0-103 and LX0-104 in partnership with Linux Professional Institute. •
PenTest+: intermediate-level certification focusing on
penetration testing. covers risk analysis, threat detection, and penetration testing and ethical hacking tools and methodologies. Currently aligns with the DOD 8570 standard. •
Server+: focuses on
server-specific hardware and
operating systems, IT environments, disaster recovery and business continuity. Server+ had updates released in 2005, 2009, 2018, and 2021.
Master level certification CompTIA Advanced Security Practitioner (CASP+) is the highest level certification in CompTIA's cybersecurity pathway after Security+, CySA+, and PenTest+. The CASP+ certification was accredited by the
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) on December 13, 2011. The CASP+ exam will certify that the successful candidate has the technical knowledge and skills required to conceptualize, design, and engineer secure solutions across complex enterprise environments. In March 2013, the
U.S. Department of Defense approved the certification as a baseline certification accepted for Information Assurance Technical Level III, IS Manager Level II and IA Systems Architect and Engineer Levels I and II. The name of CASP+ is being changed to
SecurityX upon the release of exam version CAS-005 in December of 2024. (Note: For A+ up through CASP+ one can renew or extend their certification by satisfying in these cases 20 to 75 CEUs a.k.a. "Continuing Education Units," over the three-year period.)
Specialty certifications •
Project+: In 2001, CompTIA acquired the
Project+ project management certification program from
Gartner. The program, previously called "IT Project+", was updated in 2003.
Retired certificates •
Certified Document Imaging Architect (CDIA+), is a certification for competency in
document imaging,
document management, and
enterprise content management. Retired on December 1, 2017. •
Healthcare IT Technician certification focused on IT in the healthcare industry and was aimed at IT professionals who install and maintain electronic health record systems. Retired on February 28, 2017. •
Certified Technical Trainer (CTT+) certification is a vendor-neutral certification that is applicable to training professionals in all industries. Originally administered in 2001 through The Chauncey Institute, the CTT program was acquired by CompTIA and renamed as CTT+. It was created through a collaboration of the Information Technology Training Association, Inc. (ITTA) and the Computer Education Management Association (CedMA). Retired on October 31, 2023, although anyone who had earned the CTT+ certification will remain certified after the retirement date.
Stackable certifications In January 2018, CompTIA released stackable certifications:
CompTIA infrastructure career pathway • Specialist • CompTIA IT Operations Specialist (A+/Network+) • CompTIA Systems Support Specialist (A+/Linux+) • Professional • CompTIA Cloud Admin Professional (Network+/Cloud+) • CompTIA Network Infrastructure Professional (Network+/Server+) • CompTIA Linux Network Professional (Network+/Linux+)
CompTIA cybersecurity career pathway • Specialist • CompTIA Secure Infrastructure Specialist (A+/Network+/Security+) • Professional • CompTIA Secure Cloud Professional (Security+/Cloud+) • CompTIA Security Analytics Professional (Security+/CySA+) • CompTIA Network Vulnerability Assessment Professional (Security+/PenTest+) • CompTIA Network Security Professional (Security+/PenTest+/CySA+) • Expert • CompTIA Security Analytics Expert (Security+/CySA+/CASP+) • CompTIA Security Infrastructure Expert (Security+/CySA+/PenTest+/CASP+)
Trustmarks CompTIA offers
trustmarks to businesses to certify their security capabilities and credentials. The CompTIA Security Trustmark+ is based on the
NIST Cybersecurity Framework and demonstrates compliance with key industry regulations such as
PCI-DSS,
SSAE-16,
HIPAA, and others reliant on the NIST Framework. It is based on a third-party assessment of security policies, procedures and operations. CompTIA offered additional trustmarks, a Managed Services Trustmark and Managed Print Trustmark, that were retired on Sept. 30, 2021. ==History==