AZ-900 Exam Tips 2026 — 10 Strategies to Pass Azure Fundamentals
Master the AZ-900 exam with 10 proven strategies: free voucher, Microsoft Learn path, scenario question tips, timing, and retake policy.

Why Your Preparation Strategy Matters
The AZ-900 Microsoft Azure Fundamentals exam is one of the most popular entry-level cloud certifications in the world — but that does not mean it is a pushover. Without the right approach, candidates who skip structured preparation routinely score below the 700-point passing threshold. A deliberate strategy that covers study resources, question-reading techniques, and test-day habits dramatically increases your chances of passing on the first attempt.
This guide outlines 10 actionable strategies drawn from the exam blueprint, community feedback, and Microsoft's own published guidance. Whether you are completely new to cloud computing or an IT professional looking to formalize your Azure knowledge, these tips will help you walk into the exam with confidence. For background on core concepts, review our AZ-900 Complete Guide and AZ-900 Study Guide before diving into exam-day preparation.
Overview of 10 Exam Tips
- Use Microsoft Learn's free learning path (10–15 hours)
- Secure a free exam voucher via Microsoft Virtual Training Days
- Learn to read scenario-based questions strategically
- Understand Azure pricing model questions fully before answering
- Prioritize the Azure Architecture and Services domain (35–40% of exam)
- Use the elimination technique on unfamiliar services
- Apply a smart timing strategy (~1 min per question)
- Complete 3+ full practice tests before booking
- Know what to do if you score below 700
- Understand the retake policy before exam day
Tip 1 — Use Microsoft Learn's Free Learning Path
Microsoft offers a fully free, self-paced learning path titled "Microsoft Azure Fundamentals" on Microsoft Learn. The path is broken into three modules aligned directly to the exam's three domain areas: Cloud Concepts, Azure Architecture and Services, and Azure Management and Governance. Most candidates complete it in 10–15 hours across one to two weeks. Do not rush — absorb the interactive sandbox exercises, which let you practice Azure tasks without needing a paid subscription.
The key advantage of Microsoft Learn is that the content is written by the same team that writes the exam. Terminology, service names, and conceptual framing all match what you will see on test day. No third-party material can match that alignment.
Tip 3 — How to Read Scenario Questions
Approximately 60–70% of AZ-900 questions are scenario-based. They describe a business situation and ask which Azure service or approach best fits. The single most valuable skill is learning to spot keyword signals in the question stem:
- "Most cost-effective" → think Reserved Instances, Azure Hybrid Benefit, or Spot VMs rather than on-demand pricing.
- "Best for compliance" → think Azure Policy, Azure Blueprints, or Microsoft Defender for Cloud.
- "Requires no code changes" → think PaaS migration, Azure App Service, or Azure SQL Managed Instance.
- "Automatically scales" → think Azure Virtual Machine Scale Sets or Azure Kubernetes Service.
- "Minimizes administrative overhead" → SaaS or managed PaaS over IaaS.
Train yourself to underline (mentally or with the test interface's highlighting tool) the constraint keyword before reading the answer options. This prevents the most common error: picking an answer that is technically correct in isolation but wrong for the constraint given.
Tip 5 — Focus on Azure Architecture and Services
The Azure Architecture and Services domain accounts for 35–40% of the exam — the largest single domain. It covers compute (VMs, containers, App Service, Azure Functions), networking (VNet, VPN Gateway, ExpressRoute, Azure DNS), storage (Blob, File, Queue, Table), databases (Azure SQL, Cosmos DB, Azure Database for MySQL), and identity (Azure Active Directory / Microsoft Entra ID). Candidates who underweight this domain in their study schedule consistently score in the 600–680 range, just below passing.
Prioritize understanding the purpose and use case of each service over memorizing pricing tiers or exact SLA percentages. The exam tests conceptual fit, not product specifications. Our Azure Services Overview and Cloud Concepts Guide cover the most-tested services in depth.
Tip 6 — Use the Elimination Technique
When you encounter a service name you do not recognize, elimination is your best tool. On a 4-option multiple choice question, you can almost always eliminate 1–2 options that are clearly off-topic (e.g., a storage service when the question is about identity). Narrowing to 2 options gives you a 50% chance even with zero knowledge of the remaining services. Combined with scenario keyword reading, you can often infer the correct answer from context without recognizing every service by name.
Tip 7 — Timing Strategy
The AZ-900 exam delivers 40–60 questions in a 45–65 minute window. That works out to roughly 1 minute per question — tight, but manageable if you do not dwell. For questions you are unsure of, use the flag-for-review feature, make your best guess, and move on. Return to flagged questions in the final 10 minutes. This approach prevents time panic and ensures you answer every question. Unanswered questions count as wrong; guesses give you at least a 25% chance per question.
Tip 8 — Take 3+ Practice Tests Before Booking
Do not book your exam until you are consistently scoring 800+ on full-length practice tests. A single practice test is not enough — variance is high. Three or more tests across different question banks will surface your remaining weak areas and confirm that your score is stable. Microsoft offers a free official practice assessment at Microsoft Learn. Supplement with our AZ-900 Practice Strategies guide and full-length AZ-900 practice tests.
Tip 9 — What to Do If You Score Below 700
A score below 700 is a signal, not a verdict. Review your score report carefully — it shows performance by domain, not by individual question, but that domain breakdown is enough to focus your restudy. If you failed on Azure Architecture and Services, spend an additional week on compute and networking. If Cloud Concepts let you down, revisit the shared responsibility model and cloud deployment types. Most candidates who fail once and follow a targeted restudy plan pass on their second attempt.
Tip 10 — Know the Retake Policy
Microsoft's retake policy for AZ-900 (as of 2026): if you fail, you must wait 24 hours before retaking. After a second failure, you must wait 14 days between each subsequent attempt. There is no limit on the number of attempts, but each attempt requires paying the exam fee again unless you have a free voucher. Plan accordingly — do not rush back after a failed attempt without addressing your weak domains first.

Get a Free AZ-900 Exam Voucher
Microsoft offers free exam vouchers through its Virtual Training Days program. These are live, instructor-led online events (typically 2 days) that cover Azure Fundamentals content. Attendees who complete the full event receive a free exam voucher for AZ-900, which normally costs $165 USD.
How to claim your voucher:
- Go to the Microsoft Events page and search for "Azure Virtual Training Day: Fundamentals."
- Register for an upcoming session — events run multiple times per month globally.
- Attend both days of the training (partial attendance does not qualify).
- Within 5 business days of completing the event, Microsoft sends a voucher code via email.
- Use the code when scheduling your exam on Pearson VUE or Certiport.
Virtual Training Day spots fill quickly. Register 2–3 weeks in advance and mark both days as non-negotiable on your calendar. This is the single highest-value shortcut available to AZ-900 candidates in 2026.

AZ-900 Exam Tips Questions and Answers
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.