AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) Exam Learning Path
📋 Exam Update: The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam was updated to CLF-C02 on September 19, 2023. The previous version (CLF-C01) was retired on September 18, 2023. This guide has been fully updated for the CLF-C02 exam.
- AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) is a foundational-level certification that validates overall knowledge of the AWS Cloud, independent of a specific job role.
- AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam is ideal for starting your AWS certification journey and provides non-technical professionals foundational cloud literacy.
- AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Exam has 65 questions to be answered in 90 minutes.
- A scaled score of 700 out of 1000 is required to pass. Approximately 50 questions are scored, while 15 are unscored pretest questions.
- The exam can be taken at a Pearson VUE testing center or via online proctoring from any private space (home or office).
- The exam costs $100 USD and is available in multiple languages including English, Japanese, Korean, and Simplified Chinese.
AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam validates the following:
- Define what the AWS Cloud is and the basic global infrastructure
- Describe the AWS Cloud value proposition and benefits of cloud migration
- Describe key services on the AWS platform and their common use cases (compute, storage, networking, databases, AI/ML)
- Describe basic security and compliance aspects of the AWS platform and the shared responsibility model
- Define the billing, account management, and pricing models
- Identify sources of documentation or technical assistance (e.g., white papers, support plans)
- Describe basic/core characteristics of deploying and operating in the AWS Cloud
- Identify cloud migration strategies and AWS migration services
Refer to the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) Exam Guide
CLF-C02 Exam Domain Breakdown
| Domain | Weight |
|---|---|
| Domain 1: Cloud Concepts | 24% |
| Domain 2: Security and Compliance | 30% |
| Domain 3: Cloud Technology and Services | 34% |
| Domain 4: Billing, Pricing, and Support | 12% |
Key Changes from CLF-C01 to CLF-C02:
- Security and Compliance weight increased from 25% to 30%
- Billing and Pricing weight decreased from 16% to 12%
- New topics added: AI/ML services, cloud migration strategies, sustainability pillar
- Greater emphasis on the AWS Well-Architected Framework (now 6 pillars)
- Exam time reduced from 100 minutes to 90 minutes
AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Exam Resources
- AWS Official Cloud Practitioner Digital Training (Free)
- Online Courses
- Stephane Maarek – Ultimate AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner CLF-C02
- Whizlabs – AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner CLF-C02 Course
- Coursera – AWS Cloud Practitioner Essentials
- Coursera – Exam Prep: AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Foundations
- KodeKloud – AWS Cloud Practitioner CLF-C02 Course
- Practice Tests
- Stephane Maarek – AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner CLF-C02 Practice Exams
- Whizlabs – AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Practice Tests
- Key topics include AWS services, Shared Responsibility Model, Well-Architected Framework, Security & Compliance, Billing & Cost Management, and Support Plans.
- Make sure you go through the whitepapers, which cover all the topics required for the exam.
AWS Cloud Computing Whitepapers
- Overview of Amazon Web Services
- Architecting for the Cloud: AWS Best Practices
- How AWS Pricing Works
- AWS Well-Architected Framework
- Compare AWS Support Plans
AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) Exam Contents
Domain 1: Cloud Concepts (24%)
- 1.1 Define the benefits of the AWS Cloud
- Agility – Speed, Experimentation, Innovation
- Elasticity – Scale on demand, Eliminate wasted capacity
- High Availability – Spread across multiple Availability Zones
- Flexibility – Broad set of products, Low to no cost to entry
- Security – Compliance certifications, Shared responsibility model
- Global Reach – Deploy globally in minutes using Regions and Edge Locations
- 1.2 Identify design principles of the AWS Cloud
- Advantages of Cloud Computing
- Trade upfront expense for variable expense
- Benefit from massive economies of scale
- Stop guessing about capacity
- Increase speed and agility
- Stop spending money running and maintaining data centers
- Go global in minutes
- AWS Well-Architected Framework (6 Pillars)
- Operational Excellence – Run and monitor systems to deliver business value
- Security – Protect information, systems, and assets
- Reliability – Recover from failures and meet demand
- Performance Efficiency – Use resources efficiently
- Cost Optimization – Avoid unnecessary costs
- Sustainability – Minimize environmental impact of cloud workloads (added 2021)
- Advantages of Cloud Computing
- 1.3 Understand the benefits of and strategies for migration to the AWS Cloud
- Cloud adoption strategies (AWS Cloud Adoption Framework – CAF)
- Migration strategies: the 7 Rs (Rehost, Replatform, Repurchase, Refactor, Retire, Retain, Relocate)
- AWS Cloud Architecting – Best Practices
- 1.4 Understand concepts of cloud economics
- Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) – Compare on-premises vs. cloud costs
- Fixed costs vs. variable costs
- Right-sizing and resource optimization
- Managed services reduce operational overhead
Domain 2: Security and Compliance (30%)
- 2.1 Define the AWS Shared Responsibility Model
- AWS responsibility: Security OF the cloud (hardware, software, networking, facilities)
- Customer responsibility: Security IN the cloud (data, identity, applications, OS, network config)
- Shared controls: Patch management, configuration management, awareness & training
- 2.2 Define AWS Cloud security and compliance concepts
- AWS compliance programs (SOC, PCI DSS, HIPAA, FedRAMP)
- Data protection and encryption (at rest and in transit)
- AWS Artifact – on-demand access to AWS compliance reports
- 2.3 Identify AWS access management capabilities
- IAM – Users, Groups, Roles, Policies
- Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
- IAM Identity Center (formerly AWS SSO) – centralized access management
- Root user vs. IAM user best practices
- 2.4 Identify components and resources for security
- CloudTrail – API call auditing and logging
- AWS GuardDuty – intelligent threat detection
- AWS Inspector – automated vulnerability assessment
- AWS Security Hub – centralized security findings
- AWS Shield – DDoS protection
- WAF – Web Application Firewall
- AWS KMS – Key Management Service for encryption
- AWS Macie – sensitive data discovery using ML
Domain 3: Cloud Technology and Services (34%)
- 3.1 Define methods of deploying and operating in the AWS Cloud
- Deployment models: Cloud, Hybrid, On-premises (private cloud)
- Connectivity options: VPN, Direct Connect, Public internet
- AWS Management Console, CLI, SDKs, Infrastructure as Code
- 3.2 Define the AWS global infrastructure
- Regions, Availability Zones, Edge Locations, Local Zones, Wavelength Zones
- Factors for choosing a Region (compliance, latency, service availability, cost)
- 3.3 Identify AWS compute services
- EC2 – Virtual servers, instance types, pricing models
- Lambda – Serverless compute, event-driven
- ECS & EKS – Container orchestration
- AWS Fargate – Serverless containers
- Elastic Beanstalk – Platform as a Service (PaaS)
- AWS Lightsail – Simple virtual private servers
- Auto Scaling – Scale based on demand
- 3.4 Identify AWS storage services
- 3.5 Identify AWS networking services
- VPC – Virtual private network, subnets, security groups, NACLs
- CloudFront – Content delivery network (CDN)
- Route 53 – DNS and domain registration, routing policies
- ELB – Distribute traffic (ALB, NLB, GLB)
- VPN & Direct Connect – On-premises connectivity
- AWS Global Accelerator – Improve application availability and performance
- AWS Transit Gateway – Connect VPCs and on-premises networks
- 3.6 Identify AWS database services
- RDS – Managed relational databases (MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Oracle, SQL Server)
- Aurora – High-performance MySQL/PostgreSQL compatible
- DynamoDB – Managed NoSQL (key-value and document)
- ElastiCache – In-memory caching (Redis, Memcached)
- Amazon Redshift – Data warehouse
- Amazon DocumentDB – MongoDB compatible
- Amazon Neptune – Graph database
- 3.7 Identify AWS AI/ML and analytics services
- Amazon SageMaker – Build, train, and deploy ML models
- Amazon Rekognition – Image and video analysis
- Amazon Comprehend – Natural language processing
- Amazon Lex – Conversational AI (chatbots)
- Amazon Polly – Text-to-speech
- Amazon Transcribe – Speech-to-text
- Amazon Translate – Language translation
- Amazon Bedrock – Generative AI with foundation models
- Amazon Q – AI assistant for business and development
- Amazon Athena – Serverless query service for S3
- Amazon QuickSight – Business intelligence and dashboards
- 3.8 Identify AWS management and governance services
- CloudWatch – Monitoring and observability
- CloudFormation – Infrastructure as Code
- CloudTrail – API activity auditing
- AWS Config – Resource configuration tracking
- Trusted Advisor – Best practice recommendations
- AWS Health Dashboard (formerly Personal Health Dashboard) – Service and account health
- Systems Manager – Operational management at scale
- AWS Organizations – Multi-account management
- 3.9 Identify AWS migration and transfer services
- AWS Migration Hub – Track migrations
- AWS Database Migration Service (DMS) – Database migration
- AWS Snow Family (Snowcone, Snowball, Snowmobile) – Offline data transfer
- AWS DataSync – Online data transfer
- AWS Application Migration Service – Lift-and-shift migrations
- 3.10 Identify messaging and integration services
Domain 4: Billing, Pricing, and Support (12%)
- 4.1 Compare and contrast the various pricing models for AWS
- includes AWS Pricing
- Know EC2 pricing models: On-Demand, Reserved Instances, Savings Plans, Spot, Dedicated
- Know Lambda pricing: based on number of requests and duration
- Know S3 pricing: storage class, requests, data transfer
- Understand Savings Plans (Compute and EC2 Instance) as flexible alternative to Reserved Instances
- includes AWS Pricing
- 4.2 Understand resources for billing, budget, and cost management
- includes Billing and Cost Management
- AWS Pricing Calculator – Estimate costs for AWS services and architectures
- AWS Cost Explorer – Visualize, understand, and forecast spending
- AWS Budgets – Set custom cost and usage budgets with alerts
- AWS Cost and Usage Report – Most detailed billing data
- AWS Free Tier – Explore services at no cost (Always Free, 12 Months Free, Trials)
- 4.3 Identify AWS support resources
- includes AWS Support Plans
⚠️ AWS Support Plans Update (December 2025): AWS announced a restructuring of Support Plans at re:Invent 2025. The legacy Developer, Business, and Enterprise On-Ramp plans will be discontinued on January 1, 2027. The new structure is:
- Business Support+ – AI-powered assistance with seamless transition to AWS experts
- Enterprise Support – Designated TAM, 15-minute critical response, strategic guidance
- Unified Operations – Most comprehensive, for large-scale enterprise operations
The CLF-C02 exam may still reference the current (legacy) support plan structure during the transition period.
Current AWS Support Plans (for CLF-C02 exam)
- Basic (Free) – Account and billing support, AWS Health Dashboard, limited Trusted Advisor checks
- Developer – Email support during business hours, 1 primary contact
- Business – 24/7 phone/chat/email, full Trusted Advisor, AWS Support API, unlimited contacts
- Enterprise On-Ramp – Pool of TAMs, concierge support, 30-minute critical response SLA
- Enterprise – Dedicated TAM, Well-Architected Reviews, Concierge, <15 minute critical response SLA
Key exam points:
- Business and above provide: 24/7 access to Cloud Support Engineers via phone/chat/email, Full Trusted Advisor checks
- Enterprise only provides: Dedicated TAM, Well-Architected Reviews, Support Concierge, <15 min SLA
Deprecated Tool Note
The AWS TCO Calculator referenced in older study materials has been deprecated. Use the AWS Pricing Calculator instead for estimating costs and comparing on-premises vs. cloud economics.