IC3 โ Internet and Computing Core Certification โ is a digital literacy credential offered by Certiport, a testing and certification company owned by Pearson VUE. It's designed to validate foundational technology skills: using computers, working with software applications, and navigating the internet and digital communication tools safely and effectively.
It's not an advanced IT certification. IC3 is deliberately positioned as an entry-level credential โ the kind of thing that demonstrates you can use technology competently in a workplace or academic setting. That positioning makes it widely used in middle schools, high schools, community colleges, and workforce development programs. It's also recognized by employers in administrative, customer service, and office-support roles where basic computer proficiency matters.
If you're looking for a certification that proves you can do the things most jobs now assume you can do โ manage files, use productivity software, browse the web safely, collaborate online โ IC3 provides that credential in a form that's verifiable and recognized.
The IC3 certification consists of three individual exams. You need to pass all three to earn the IC3 Digital Literacy certification:
Each exam is separate โ you can take them in any order, and you can retake individual exams if you don't pass one. There's no requirement to take all three at once. Most candidates spread them across multiple testing sessions.
IC3 certification makes most sense for:
It's also used in workforce development programs and adult education contexts where verifiable digital skills are part of the program outcome. If you're a program coordinator, IC3 is one of the more accessible certifications to build into a training curriculum.
This exam covers the physical and logical components of computer systems. You'll be tested on hardware (what a CPU does, types of storage, input/output devices), operating system functions (file systems, user accounts, settings, updates), software categories (productivity, utility, and entertainment software), and basic troubleshooting concepts. It's not deep technical knowledge โ it's the kind of functional understanding that helps someone use a computer confidently and maintain it at a basic level.
This is the productivity software exam. It's heavily focused on Microsoft Office equivalents โ word processing (document formatting, styles, track changes), spreadsheets (formulas, functions, charts, data sorting), and presentations (slide design, transitions, speaker notes). There's also some coverage of basic database concepts. The exam tests practical knowledge: you'll see questions about specific menu options, feature names, and task sequences, not abstract concepts.
This exam covers how people use technology to communicate, collaborate, and navigate the internet. Topics include browser functions, search strategies, email best practices, digital communication tools (video conferencing, messaging, social media), cloud storage and collaboration, online safety (password security, phishing recognition, privacy settings), and digital citizenship (copyright, appropriate online behavior, digital footprint).
IC3 preparation is straightforward because the exam content is clearly defined. Certiport publishes the exam objectives โ the specific skills and knowledge areas covered โ for each of the three exams. These are your study guide.
For Computing Fundamentals and Living Online, the material is primarily conceptual. Read through the exam objectives, make sure you understand each topic, and practice with sample questions. These exams are less hands-on and more knowledge-based.
For Key Applications, the best preparation is actually using the software. If you have access to Microsoft Office (or Google Workspace as an alternative), practice the specific tasks listed in the exam objectives โ creating and formatting documents, building spreadsheets with formulas, designing presentations. The exam may include simulated tasks where you perform actions in a simulated Office environment, not just answer multiple-choice questions.
Each IC3 exam costs approximately $40โ$75 depending on your testing location and whether you're taking it through a school or workforce program. Many schools and workforce development programs cover the exam costs as part of their curriculum โ if you're enrolled in a program, ask whether exam fees are included before paying out of pocket.
Retake fees apply if you need to retest. Certiport's retake policy allows a second attempt without waiting; a third attempt requires a 14-day waiting period.
How does IC3 compare to other entry-level certifications?
IC3 sits in a clear niche: it's the most widely recognized credential for demonstrating general digital literacy at an entry level. If your goal is workplace-ready technology skills rather than a career in IT, IC3 is the most direct path to a verified credential.
The fastest way to identify where you need focused preparation is through practice testing. Don't wait until you've reviewed every exam objective โ take a practice test first, see where you're already solid, and concentrate your study time on the gaps.
For the Key Applications exam in particular, hands-on practice with the actual software is more valuable than reading about it. If you know you'll be tested on Excel formulas or Word formatting options, spend time doing those things โ creating real spreadsheets, formatting real documents โ not just reading about how they work.
The IC3 certification is achievable with focused preparation. It's a credential that opens doors for people who have digital skills but no formal way to verify them. If that's you โ start practicing today.