AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Practice Exam: 2026 CLF-C02 Prep
Take free AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner practice exams for CLF-C02. Realistic questions, detailed explanations, and tips to pass on your first try.
If you're prepping for the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam, you already know the stakes—AWS certifications open real doors, and the CLF-C02 is your first step into Amazon's cloud ecosystem. But here's the honest truth: most people who fail the exam didn't underestimate the content. They underestimated the format. Taking a solid AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner practice exam is the single most effective thing you can do to close that gap.
This guide walks you through exactly what to expect, how to structure your practice, and what the trickiest question types look like. Let's get into it.
| Section | Questions | Time | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cloud Concepts | 24 | — | 24% |
| Security and Compliance | 30 | — | 30% |
| Cloud Technology and Services | 34 | — | 34% |
| Billing, Pricing, and Support | 12 | — | 12% |
| Total | 65 | — | 100% |
About 72% of first-time test takers pass the CLF-C02. Candidates with 4+ weeks of structured practice score significantly higher.
What the CLF-C02 Practice Exam Actually Tests
The updated CLF-C02 exam isn't just memorizing service names—it tests your ability to apply cloud concepts in realistic scenarios. AWS redesigned the question pool to include more situational prompts, which means rote memorization won't cut it anymore.
Here's what you'll face across the four domains:
Cloud Concepts (24%)
You need to understand the value proposition of cloud computing—why companies migrate, what the shared responsibility model means, and how the AWS global infrastructure (regions, availability zones, edge locations) actually works. Questions here often describe a business scenario and ask which cloud benefit applies.
Security and Compliance (30%)
This is the heaviest domain and the one that trips up most first-timers. Expect questions on IAM best practices, the AWS shared responsibility model, encryption options (at rest vs. in transit), and compliance programs like HIPAA and SOC 2. You don't need to be a security expert—but you do need to know who's responsible for what on AWS.
Cloud Technology and Services (34%)
The biggest slice. You'll need to recognize the right AWS service for a given scenario—S3 for object storage, EC2 for compute, RDS for managed databases, CloudFront for content delivery, and so on. The CLF-C02 tests breadth, not depth, so you need a solid working knowledge of 30+ services without needing to configure them.
Billing, Pricing, and Support (12%)
Smaller but surprisingly tricky. Know the difference between On-Demand, Reserved Instances, Savings Plans, and Spot Instances. Understand the AWS Free Tier, the Pricing Calculator, and when each AWS support plan (Basic, Developer, Business, Enterprise) is appropriate.
A well-structured AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner study guide will cover all four domains—but practice exams are where you find your actual weak spots.
How to Use Practice Exams Effectively
There's a wrong way and a right way to do practice tests. Most candidates treat them like a final check—something you do in the last few days before the exam. That's backwards.
Start practice exams early, ideally in your second week of studying. Here's why: practice exams reveal exactly what you don't know while you still have time to fix it. Waiting until day 27 of 30 to discover you can't distinguish between AWS Organizations and AWS Control Tower is a rough situation to be in.
The 3-Pass Method
Use this approach for every practice test you take:
Pass 1 — Timed run. Do the full exam under realistic conditions. 65 questions, 90 minutes, no notes. This tells you your baseline score and which domain you're weakest in.
Pass 2 — Review every wrong answer. Don't just check what the right answer was—understand why your answer was wrong. AWS exam questions are designed to have two plausible answers; the right one is usually more cost-effective, more secure, or more in line with AWS best practices.
Pass 3 — Re-test flagged questions. Any question you guessed on or found genuinely confusing should get revisited 3-4 days later. Spaced repetition matters here.
Score Benchmarks
On practice exams, you want to consistently hit 80%+ before you schedule your real test. A passing score is 700 out of 1000 (roughly 70%), but aiming for 80% on practice gives you a buffer for exam-day nerves and unfamiliar phrasing.
If you're scoring below 65% after two weeks of study, slow down and revisit the core material—especially the shared responsibility model and core service identification, which account for the majority of questions.
Read our full CLF-C02 exam guide for a domain-by-domain breakdown of what to prioritize.- ▸Study Cloud Concepts domain: cloud benefits, deployment models, AWS global infrastructure
- ▸Learn core compute services: EC2, Lambda, ECS, Elastic Beanstalk
- ▸Learn core storage: S3, EBS, EFS, Glacier
- ▸Take a 20-question practice quiz daily to identify weak areas
- ▸Master the shared responsibility model — draw it out from memory
- ▸Study IAM: users, groups, roles, policies, MFA
- ▸Learn database services: RDS, DynamoDB, Aurora, ElastiCache
- ▸Learn networking: VPC, subnets, security groups, Route 53, CloudFront
- ▸Take first full-length practice exam (timed, 65 questions)
- ▸Study billing: pricing models, Cost Explorer, Budgets, TCO Calculator
- ▸Learn compliance programs and AWS support plans
- ▸Cover monitoring tools: CloudWatch, CloudTrail, AWS Config, Trusted Advisor
- ▸Take second full-length practice exam and review all wrong answers
- ▸Re-study weakest domain identified in Week 2-3 practice exams
- ▸Take two more full-length practice exams under strict time conditions
- ▸Review AWS service cheat sheet — 30+ services in one page
- ▸Schedule exam when consistently scoring 80%+
High-Yield Topics to Focus Your Practice
Not all CLF-C02 topics are created equal. Some show up constantly—others are rare. Here's where to concentrate your practice time based on exam weighting and question frequency.
Shared Responsibility Model
This comes up in multiple domains. AWS is responsible for security of the cloud (physical infrastructure, hypervisors, managed service availability). You're responsible for security in the cloud (your data, your IAM configuration, OS patching on EC2). Know it cold. Know how it changes for managed services like RDS vs. unmanaged EC2.
Core Service Identification
Practice matching scenarios to services. "A company needs to store flat files with 99.999999999% durability" → S3. "A startup needs a fully managed NoSQL database" → DynamoDB. "A developer needs to run code without managing servers" → Lambda. Build these associations until they're automatic.
AWS Support Plans
Know the four tiers: Basic (free, no tech support), Developer (~$29/mo, business-hours email), Business (~$100/mo, 24/7 phone), Enterprise (~$15,000/mo, TAM included). Questions often describe a company's needs and ask which plan is most appropriate and cost-effective.
EC2 Pricing Models
On-Demand: flexible, no commitment, highest per-hour cost. Reserved Instances: 1-3 year commitment, up to 72% discount. Savings Plans: commitment to $ spend/hour, flexible across instance types. Spot Instances: up to 90% discount, can be interrupted. Understand the right model for each workload type.
AWS Well-Architected Framework
Know the five pillars: Operational Excellence, Security, Reliability, Performance Efficiency, and Cost Optimization. The CLF-C02 frequently tests which pillar a given recommendation belongs to.
These high-yield areas account for roughly 60% of total exam questions. Nail them and you've already passed—the remaining 40% is margin.
Sample Practice Exam Questions (With Explanations)
Let's look at some representative CLF-C02 question types. These aren't leaked exam questions—they're examples of the style and difficulty level you should prepare for.
Question Type 1: Shared Responsibility
A company hosts a web application on Amazon EC2. A security audit finds that OS-level patches have not been applied. Who is responsible?
Answer: The customer. EC2 is an unmanaged compute service—AWS manages the physical host, but you own the OS and everything above it. This changes if you're using Elastic Beanstalk or a managed container service, where AWS handles more of the patching.
Question Type 2: Service Selection
A startup needs to send transactional emails (password resets, order confirmations) at scale. Which AWS service should they use?
Answer: Amazon SES (Simple Email Service). SES is built for high-volume programmatic email. This trips up candidates who confuse SES (email sending) with SNS (pub/sub notifications, which can include SMS and email but isn't the right tool for transactional marketing email).
Question Type 3: Cost Optimization
A company runs EC2 instances 24/7 for the next 3 years. Which pricing model provides the greatest cost savings?
Answer: Reserved Instances (or Savings Plans). On-Demand is the most flexible but most expensive for steady-state workloads. Spot is cheaper but can be interrupted. For 24/7 baseline capacity with a 3-year commitment, Reserved Instances provide up to 72% savings over On-Demand.
Question Type 4: Global Infrastructure
A user wants low-latency access to their application from users in multiple continents. Which AWS feature enables this?
Answer: AWS Regions and Amazon CloudFront. CloudFront is AWS's CDN—it caches content at edge locations globally, reducing latency for end users. Multiple Regions allow you to deploy infrastructure closer to your user base.
Notice the pattern: every question has a business context and usually 1-2 plausible distractors. The right answer is almost always the most cost-effective or the most aligned with AWS best practices.
You can practice these exact question formats right now with our full CLF-C02 exam prep guide and CCP practice tests.
Exam Day Tips That Actually Help
You've done the practice exams. You're scoring 80%. Here's how to protect that score when it matters.
Read every question twice. AWS questions often hinge on a single word: "most cost-effective," "least operational overhead," "requires no code changes." Skimming costs points.
Eliminate, then choose. On tough questions, eliminate the obviously wrong answers first. You'll usually get down to two options—then apply the cost/simplicity/AWS best practices filter.
Flag and move on. Don't spend more than 90 seconds on any question. Flag it, move forward, come back. You have about 83 seconds per question on average—use them well.
Don't second-guess yourself. Studies on certification exams consistently show that your first instinct is more often correct than your revised answer. Only change an answer if you've recalled a specific fact that contradicts your original choice.
Watch for regional caveats. Some AWS services aren't available in all regions. Questions about global availability or specific regional deployments need careful reading.
What's Next After You Pass
The CCP is a foundation certification. Once you've got it, your next logical step depends on your career path. Solutions architects typically go for the AWS Solutions Architect – Associate (SAA-C03). Developers often pursue AWS Certified Developer – Associate. SysOps and DevOps roles have their own associate tracks.
AWS certifications are valid for three years. AWS periodically updates exam content, so when renewal time comes, check the current exam guide version before booking.
Check out our CCP practice test PDF if you want a printable offline study resource to use alongside digital practice.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.