AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner
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Последняя проверка: April 2026
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The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) is AWS's foundational credential and is intentionally accessible to non-technical roles. It validates a working understanding of the AWS Cloud value proposition, the major service families, basic security and compliance models, and AWS pricing and support. The exam targets a broad audience — sales, marketing, project managers, finance, junior developers, and anyone supporting AWS-using teams — as well as career changers entering cloud for the first time. Expect mostly conceptual questions: definitions, "which service does X", and shared-responsibility boundaries. CLF-C02 launched in September 2023, refreshing CLF-C01 with broader service coverage (machine learning, container, and migration services) and updated billing concepts.
AWS value proposition, the AWS Cloud Adoption Framework (CAF), Well-Architected Framework pillars, and basic economics (CapEx vs. OpEx, elasticity). Mostly definitional.
The largest domain at 30% (tied). The shared-responsibility model is the single most-tested concept on the exam. IAM basics, MFA, root-account hygiene, AWS Artifact, and broad compliance program awareness.
Largest domain at 34%. Recognition-level familiarity with EC2, S3, RDS, Lambda, VPC, CloudFront, Route 53, IAM, plus newer additions like SageMaker, Bedrock awareness, and migration services. Memorize service categories and one-line use cases.
AWS pricing models (On-Demand, Reserved, Savings Plans, Spot), Free Tier, Cost Explorer, Budgets, and AWS Support tiers. Smallest domain (12%) but consistently appears on the exam.
$55k–$85k–$130k USD annual
Range covers US-based entry-level and adjacent business roles where AWS literacy is preferred. Sales and FinOps roles with commission can exceed the high end significantly. CLF-C02 by itself rarely moves a technical-role salary; it functions as a literacy signal for cross-functional roles and a stepping stone for technical certs.
Source: levels.fyi 2025–2026 entry/junior cloud roles, U.S. BLS OEWS May 2024 (15-1232 computer user support specialists, 13-1111 management analysts). Figures are approximate; actual compensation depends on role, region, and experience.
CLF-C02 has the broadest audience of any AWS certification because it is intentionally non-technical. Recruiters and hiring managers use it as a signal that a non-engineer can hold credible conversations about AWS — useful for sales, customer success, project management, procurement, and FinOps roles. For aspiring engineers it functions as a low-cost confidence-builder before the associate-level certs. The cert pairs well with the AI Practitioner (AIF-C01) for non-technical AI roles and is a recommended on-ramp to SAA-C03 for career changers. It does NOT qualify candidates for engineering positions on its own, and most senior technical roles will not list it as preferred.
There are no formal prerequisites. AWS suggests up to six months of exposure to the AWS Cloud in any role (technical or non-technical), but in practice the exam is achievable with no AWS background given focused study.
The official AWS Cloud Practitioner Essentials course plus a reputable practice-exam set is sufficient for most candidates. There is no recommended prior cert. CLF-C02 is the most common starting point for the AWS certification path and is the standard recommended on-ramp before SAA-C03 for candidates without prior AWS exposure. Candidates already comfortable with AWS may choose to skip directly to associate-level exams.
CLF-C02 is rated Foundational and is the easiest AWS certification. Plan 20–40 hours over 2–4 weeks for candidates with no prior AWS exposure; 10–15 hours over 1–2 weeks for those with some hands-on experience. The exam is 65 scored questions in 90 minutes — multiple-choice and multiple-response, no labs.
The most common stumbling block is the breadth of named AWS services — there are over 50 services worth recognizing at a one-line level. Candidates also routinely lose points on shared-responsibility nuances (e.g., who patches the OS on EC2 vs. RDS vs. Lambda) and on pricing-model edge cases (e.g., when Spot is appropriate vs. Reserved vs. Savings Plans). Reading questions carefully matters — distractors are often correct facts that simply do not answer the asked question.
Current version. Expanded service coverage to include modern ML, container, and migration services; refreshed pricing and billing concepts. Sunset of CLF-C01 by mid-2023.
Original Cloud Practitioner exam. Long retired; service inventory was significantly narrower.
CLF-C02 (AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner) is a considered an entry-level exam testing breadth of conceptual understanding rather than hands-on depth Foundational-level exam. Most candidates need 30–80 hours of study spread over 3–6 weeks for foundational-level exams. Most candidates who score consistently above the passing threshold on practice exams pass on their first attempt.