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CompTIA Certifications

CompTIA certifications are vendor-neutral IT credentials covering areas such as technical support, networking, cybersecurity, cloud, Linux, and project work. Common certifications include CompTIA A+, Network+, Security+, CySA+, PenTest+, Cloud+, Linux+, and Project+.

They are used by professionals building entry-level, specialist, or mid-career IT skills, and by HR and L&D teams planning structured technical training.

On Bildux, training providers list CompTIA courses to help learners prepare for exams, meet role requirements, and document practical knowledge in recognized IT domains.

CompTIA Course Catalogue

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CompTIA

1

CompTIA Specialist Level

The Specialist level covers CompTIA’s foundational and early-career credentials, including Tech+, A+, Network+, Security+, Data+, Project+, and Cloud Essentials+.

It is aimed at learners entering IT, career changers, and professionals building core skills in technical support, networking, cybersecurity, data analysis, IT project work, and cloud business concepts.

Compared with higher CompTIA levels, it focuses on broad role readiness before more specialized or advanced certifications.

CompTIA Specialist Level covers the entry and early-career certifications that support the cloud pathway. Learners build core IT knowledge before moving into cloud operations or architecture roles.

  • Tech+ and A+: computing basics, devices, operating systems, troubleshooting, storage, networking, software, and security practices.

  • Network+ and Security+: network configuration, connectivity, threat awareness, access control, secure operations, and incident response basics.

  • Cloud Essentials+: cloud concepts, business use cases, risk, compliance, security considerations, and cost factors used when assessing cloud services.

  • Data+ and Project+: data analysis fundamentals, reporting, project roles, schedules, budgets, and change control.

This level is suitable for new IT staff, career changers, and business professionals who need a practical base for later credentials such as Cloud+ and CloudNetX.

2

CompTIA Advanced Level

The CompTIA Advanced Level is for professionals with core IT knowledge who are ready for more specialized administration, cloud, data, automation, and security roles.

It builds on the Specialist level by moving beyond foundational concepts into job-role certifications such as Linux+, Server+, Cloud+, CySA+, PenTest+, DataSys+, SecAI+, and AutoOps+.

This level suits early to mid-career professionals preparing for technical responsibilities in infrastructure, cybersecurity, cloud operations, databases, AI security, and IT automation.

CompTIA Advanced Level covers technical credentials for professionals moving from core IT knowledge into administration, cloud operations, cybersecurity, data systems, AI security, and automation roles.

  • Linux+ and Server+: Linux administration, server hardware and software, storage, virtualization, security, backup, disaster recovery, and troubleshooting.

  • Cloud+: cloud architecture, deployment, operations, security, DevOps fundamentals, high availability, and incident response for cloud and hybrid environments.

  • CySA+ and PenTest+: threat detection, vulnerability management, security analytics, penetration testing methods, reporting, and response planning.

  • DataSys+: database administration, data management, backup, recovery, access control, and performance tasks.

  • SecAI+ and AutoOps+: AI-related security risks, secure use of AI systems, infrastructure automation, monitoring, and operational improvement.

This level suits IT staff preparing for cloud administrator, systems administrator, security analyst, penetration tester, database administrator, and infrastructure automation roles.

3

CompTIA Expert Level

The CompTIA Expert Level covers CompTIA’s Xpert Series credentials for highly experienced IT professionals. It includes SecurityX for security architects and senior security engineers, CloudNetX for network, security, and enterprise architecture in hybrid environments, and DataAI for advanced data science work.

This level differs from the Advanced level by focusing on architecture, design, implementation, and senior technical decision-making rather than core administration or specialist job-role skills.

CompTIA Expert Level covers the CompTIA Xpert Series, aimed at experienced professionals moving into senior architecture, engineering, and data science roles.

  • SecurityX: security architecture, senior security engineering, governance, risk, compliance, incident response, automation, cloud security, cryptography, and secure design across complex environments.

  • CloudNetX: hybrid network architecture, secure network design, VPNs, SD-WAN, MPLS, public cloud connectivity, Zero Trust, SASE, monitoring, performance, and advanced troubleshooting.

  • DataAI: advanced data science, mathematics, statistics, data processing, machine learning, deep learning concepts, model selection, data analysis, and applied AI data work.

This level is suitable for security architects, senior security engineers, network architects, enterprise architects, and experienced data professionals who need to prove advanced technical judgment and implementation skills.

Certification

CompTIA Certification Process

1. Choose Your CompTIA Certification Path

CompTIA does not have one mandatory first certification for everyone.

You start by choosing the certification that fits your current knowledge, job goal, or team need.

Common starting points are:

  1. CompTIA Tech+ for basic technology knowledge

  2. CompTIA A+ for IT support and help desk roles

  3. CompTIA Network+ for networking and infrastructure roles

  4. CompTIA Security+ for cybersecurity basics

From there, learners can move into more focused certifications such as Cloud+, Linux+, Server+, CySA+, PenTest+, Data+, Project+, or other role based CompTIA certifications.

2. Prepare for the Selected Exam

After choosing the certification, you prepare for the exam.

CompTIA training is not always mandatory, but it is often useful. Learners can prepare through instructor led training, self study, labs, practice questions, or official CompTIA learning materials.

Each certification has its own exam objectives. These objectives show which topics may appear in the exam.

For example:

  • A+ covers hardware, software, networking, troubleshooting, and security.

  • Network+ focuses on networking concepts, network operations, security, and troubleshooting.

  • Security+ focuses on core security skills, risk, threats, architecture, and operations.

  • Advanced certifications go deeper into areas such as cloud, Linux, servers, cybersecurity analysis, penetration testing, data, or AI.

3. Schedule and Take the Exam

When you are ready, you schedule the exam through your CompTIA account.

You can take the exam in two ways:

Most CompTIA exams include multiple choice questions and performance based questions. Performance based questions test whether you can apply knowledge in a practical task or work scenario.

Some certifications require one exam.

Some certifications require more than one exam. For example, CompTIA A+ requires two exams: Core 1 and Core 2.

After passing the required exam or exams, you receive the CompTIA certification.

4. Move to Higher Levels or Stack Certifications

After earning one certification, learners can continue with another CompTIA certification based on their career path.

  • A common beginner path is:

A+ exam → Network+ exam → Security+ exam

  • For infrastructure roles, learners may move toward:

Network+ → Server+ → Linux+ → Cloud+

  • For cybersecurity roles, learners may move toward:

Security+ → CySA+ → PenTest+ → SecurityX

CompTIA also offers stackable certifications. These show that a learner has earned more than one related CompTIA certification.

5. Renew the Certification

Most current CompTIA certifications are valid for three years.

To keep the certification active, learners must renew it before it expires.

Renewal can be done through approved Continuing Education activities, CertMaster CE, passing the latest version of the exam, or earning a higher level certification.

If a learner holds more than one CompTIA certification, renewing the highest level certification can also renew lower level certifications when they are covered by that renewal path.

Summary in One Line

Choose the right CompTIA certification → prepare with training or self study → take the exam online or at a Pearson VUE test center → earn the certificate → continue to Advanced or Expert certifications → renew every three years

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