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  1. Programs
  2. AWS Certified Security - Specialty

AWS Certified Security - Specialty

Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Certification

Become a contributor for free to openly demonstrate student outcomes, industry alignment & eligibility criteria.

The AWS Certified Security - Specialty exam is intended for individuals who have a responsibility to secure cloud solutions. The exam validates a candidate's ability to effectively demonstrate knowledge about securing AWS products and services.

Cost

Exam Fee: $300 USDShow moreShow less

Format

Online

Eligibility Calculator

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Program Pathways

Credentials this program stacks toward

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Program Details

Detailed information about this program

The AWS Certified Security - Specialty exam is intended for individuals who have a responsibility to secure cloud solutions. The exam validates a candidate's ability to effectively demonstrate knowledge about securing AWS products and services. The exam also validates a candidate's ability to complete the following tasks: - Apply specialized data classifications and AWS data protection mechanisms. - Implement data-encryption methods and AWS encryption mechanisms. - Implement AWS mechanisms to follow secure internet protocols. - Use AWS security services and features to ensure secure production environments. - Make decisions that account for tradeoffs between cost, security, and deployment complexity to meet a set of application requirements. - Understand security operations and risks. The target candidate should have the equivalent of 3–5 years of experience securing cloud solutions. Recommended AWS knowledge The target candidate should have the following AWS knowledge: - The AWS shared responsibility model and its application - Managing identity at scale - Multi-account governance - Managing software supply chain risks - Security incident prevention and response strategies - Vulnerability management in the cloud - Developing firewall rules at scale for layers 3–7 - Incident root cause analysis - Experience responding to an audit - Logging and monitoring strategies - Data encryption methodologies, both at-rest and in-transit - Disaster recovery controls, including backup strategies Job tasks that are out of scope for the target candidate The following list contains job tasks that the target candidate is not expected to be able to perform. This list is non-exhaustive. These tasks are out of scope for the exam: - Design cryptographic algorithms - Analyze traffic on the packet level - Architect overall cloud deployments - Manage end-user compute resources - Train machine learning models Exam content 1. Response types The exam includes one or more of the following question types: - Multiple choice: Has one correct response and three incorrect responses (distractors) - Multiple response: Has two or more correct responses out of five or more response options - Ordering: Has a list of 3–5 responses to complete a specified task. You must select the correct responses and place the responses in the correct order to receive credit for the question. - Matching: Has a list of responses to match with a list of 3–7 prompts. You must match all the pairs correctly to receive credit for the question. Unanswered questions are scored as incorrect. There is no penalty for guessing. The exam includes 50 questions that affect your score. 2. Unscored content The exam includes 15 unscored questions that do not affect your score. AWS collects information about performance on these unscored questions to evaluate these questions for future use as scored questions. These unscored questions are not identified on the exam. 3. Exam results The AWS Certified Security - Specialty (SCS-C03) exam has a pass or fail designation. The exam is scored against a minimum standard established by AWS professionals who follow certification industry best practices and guidelines. Your results for the exam are reported as a scaled score of 100–1,000. The minimum passing score is 750. Your score shows how you performed on the exam as a whole and whether you passed. Scaled scoring models help equate scores across multiple exam forms that might have slightly different difficulty levels. Your score report could contain a table of classifications of your performance at each section level. The exam uses a compensatory scoring model, which means that you do not need to achieve a passing score in each section. You need to pass only the overall exam. Each section of the exam has a specific weighting, so some sections have more questions than other sections have. The table of classifications contains general information that highlights your strengths and weaknesses. Use caution when you interpret section-level feedback.

Requirements

What you need to earn this credential

No requirements listed.

Financial Aid

Eligible funding programs

No funding information available.

Scholarships

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Locations

Where this program is offered

No locations specified.

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Related Programs

Programs related to this one

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Skills & Competencies

Skills developed through this program

  • Secure AWS products and services in cloud environments
  • Apply specialized data classifications and AWS data protection mechanisms
  • Implement data encryption methods and AWS encryption mechanisms
  • Implement AWS mechanisms to follow secure internet protocols
  • Use AWS security services and features to ensure secure production environments
  • Make decisions that account for tradeoffs between cost, security, and deployment complexity to meet a set of application requirements
Career Pathways

Occupations this program prepares you for

  • Information Security Analysts15-1212.00
What You'll Learn

Key competencies developed through this program

Auto-populated·from NSX Competency Framework

Mastery: developing (Level 2)(based on Certification)

  • Multi-source alert investigations — correlate across SIEM, EDR, identity, and network with reduced oversight.
  • Routine incident response — execute tier-2 containment and eradication on familiar threat types.
  • Vulnerability prioritization — assess CVSS, exploitability, and asset context to drive patching decisions.
  • Threat-intel ingestion and operationalization — turn IOCs and TTPs into detection rules.
  • Cloud-security configuration (AWS, Azure, GCP IAM and network controls) — review and remediate in routine cases.
  • Detection engineering (basic SIEM queries, custom rules) — write and tune for the SOC's standard threats.
  • Junior analysts on alert triage — coach during their first 90 days.
  • On-call shifts in the SOC rotation — handle independently with senior backstop.
  • Compliance audit evidence collection — produce for SOC 2 / ISO 27001 cycles without manager involvement.
  • Tabletop exercises — participate substantively in SOC and broader-IR drills.

Some details on this page are auto-populated from public workforce data sources: O*NET (opens in new tab), BLS (opens in new tab), College Scorecard (opens in new tab), DOL Training Provider Results (opens in new tab), NSX (opens in new tab). Provided in partnership with LER.me Career Intelligence.

Student Outcomes

Performance metrics for this program

Completion Rate
Not reported
Placement Rate
Not reported