MD-102 Renewal: Complete Guide to Keeping Your Endpoint Administrator Certification Active
MD-102 renewal made simple. Learn Microsoft's renewal process, deadlines, free assessment options, and how to keep your cert active in 2026 June. ✅

The md-102 renewal process is one of the most important — and most overlooked — steps in a Windows endpoint administrator's career. Microsoft introduced its modern renewal system to replace the old three-year recertification cycle, and understanding how it works can save you time, money, and the embarrassment of letting a hard-earned credential lapse. If you passed the MD-102 exam to earn the Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate certification, you now have an annual renewal window to keep that credential current without retaking the full exam.
Microsoft's certification renewal system is built around free online assessments published in Microsoft Learn. These assessments are not proctored, do not require scheduling, and can be completed at your own pace from any device with a browser. Unlike the original exam, renewal assessments focus specifically on what has changed in the product since your last certification date. This means the questions target new features in Microsoft Intune, updates to Windows Autopilot, changes to compliance policy frameworks, and evolving endpoint security capabilities that have shipped since your certification was issued.
Many IT professionals are caught off guard by the renewal timeline. Microsoft sends reminder emails approximately 180 days before your certification expires, then again at the 30-day mark. Your renewal window opens 6 months before your expiration date and closes on the expiration date itself. Missing this window means your certification lapses, and you would need to pass the full MD-102 proctored exam again to regain the credential. That is a significant cost — both in exam fees and preparation time — that is easily avoided by staying organized.
The renewal assessment itself is not trivial, but it is far less demanding than the original exam. Microsoft estimates it takes between 30 and 45 minutes to complete, and there is no time limit enforced during the assessment. You can use Microsoft Learn documentation, Microsoft Docs, and other online resources while taking it, making it an open-book exercise. However, the questions are designed to require genuine comprehension of new features and updated workflows, so candidates who ignore the prep materials often find themselves struggling despite the open-book format.
For administrators who work with Microsoft 365 environments daily, the renewal assessment serves as a structured opportunity to catch up on platform changes. Microsoft 365 and Intune evolve rapidly, with major feature updates arriving multiple times per year. The renewal assessment effectively forces you to review release notes and new documentation, which directly benefits your day-to-day work. Many certified professionals report that going through the renewal process revealed features and configuration options they were not aware of — capabilities already available in their tenant that they had never explored.
Understanding the content scope of the renewal is critical. Microsoft updates the renewal assessment periodically to reflect new exam objectives, and the learning paths linked from the renewal dashboard tell you exactly what topic areas will be covered. Common focus areas in recent renewal cycles have included changes to Windows Autopatch, Intune's expanded app management capabilities, updated co-management scenarios, and the evolving intersection of Entra ID (formerly Azure Active Directory) with endpoint policy. Reviewing these learning paths thoroughly before attempting the assessment is the single most effective preparation strategy available.
This guide walks you through every aspect of the MD-102 renewal process — from locating the renewal assessment on Microsoft Learn to understanding what happens if your certification expires. Whether you are approaching your first renewal after passing MD-102 or refreshing your knowledge before a subsequent annual renewal, the information here will help you stay certified, stay current, and make the most of Microsoft's modern credentialing system.
MD-102 Renewal by the Numbers

MD-102 Renewal Preparation Schedule
- ▸Log in to Microsoft Learn and navigate to your certification dashboard
- ▸Identify the linked renewal learning paths and bookmark them
- ▸Read through the official MD-102 exam skills outline for recent changes
- ▸Review Microsoft Intune release notes from the past 12 months
- ▸Complete the Microsoft Learn modules linked in your renewal dashboard
- ▸Review new Windows Autopatch configuration and management options
- ▸Study updated co-management policies and workload configurations
- ▸Practice navigating the updated Intune admin center UI
- ▸Review Entra ID (Azure AD) changes affecting endpoint management
- ▸Study updated conditional access and compliance policy frameworks
- ▸Review any changes to Microsoft Defender for Endpoint integration
- ▸Complete practice questions covering recently updated topic areas
- ▸Re-read any Microsoft Learn modules where you felt less confident
- ▸Review the exam objectives one final time and note gaps
- ▸Complete the online renewal assessment on Microsoft Learn
- ▸Download your renewed certification badge from your profile
Completing the MD-102 renewal assessment requires navigating to the right place on Microsoft Learn, and it is not always intuitive for first-time renewers. Start by signing in to your Microsoft account at learn.microsoft.com, then click on your profile icon in the top-right corner and select "Certifications." This takes you to your certification dashboard, which lists all active and expired Microsoft certifications associated with your account. Find the "Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate" entry, and you should see a "Renew" button alongside the expiration date once your renewal window is open.
If the renewal window is not yet open — meaning you are more than 6 months from expiration — the renew button will not appear. Microsoft enforces this window strictly. You cannot complete the renewal early and bank extra time; the renewal simply extends your certification by one year from the current expiration date, not from the date you complete the assessment.
This means completing the renewal on day one of the window versus the final day produces the same expiration date. There is no benefit to rushing, though waiting until the last week is obviously risky if you encounter technical issues or need extra study time.
Once you click the renew button, Microsoft Learn presents you with a set of linked learning paths specifically curated for the renewal cycle. These are not optional — they represent the official scope of what the renewal assessment will test. Each learning path is a series of modules covering updated features, new administrative workflows, and revised best practices.
Microsoft typically updates these paths when significant product changes occur, so the content you review for a renewal in 2025 may differ meaningfully from a renewal completed in 2026. Always use the paths provided in your own renewal dashboard rather than saved links from previous cycles.
The renewal assessment itself is presented as a series of multiple-choice and scenario-based questions. Unlike the full MD-102 proctored exam, which uses case studies, drag-and-drop ordering questions, and active screen simulations, the renewal assessment sticks primarily to multiple-choice formats. Questions are drawn from the content covered in the linked learning paths, and while you can reference external resources during the assessment, the most efficient candidates are those who have already internalized the material and only use documentation to double-check specific configuration details or exact parameter names.
One common concern among renewal candidates is whether the assessment tracks time or monitors their browser. Microsoft Learn's renewal assessments do not enforce time limits and do not use proctoring software. You are free to pause, consult documentation, and take breaks. However, the session may time out if left inactive for an extended period, so completing the assessment in a single sitting or across a few focused sessions is advisable. If your session times out before completion, you may need to restart from the beginning, though in some cases partial progress is retained.
Scoring the renewal assessment works differently from the original exam. Microsoft does not publish a precise passing score for renewal assessments, but the general threshold is approximately 70 percent correct. Crucially, if you do not pass on the first attempt, Microsoft allows you to retake the assessment immediately — there is no mandatory waiting period between attempts, and there is no limit on the number of retakes.
This is a significant difference from the proctored exam, which enforces a 24-hour waiting period after a first failure and a two-week wait after subsequent failures. The generous retake policy means that studying the linked learning paths thoroughly between attempts is more valuable than any test-taking strategy.
After passing the renewal assessment, your certification dashboard updates within a few minutes to reflect the new expiration date. Microsoft also sends a confirmation email and updates your Credly badge automatically. If you use your Credly profile to share certifications on LinkedIn or other professional networks, the updated badge will sync within 24 to 48 hours. It is good practice to verify the update on both platforms and check that the new expiration date reflects the expected one-year extension from your previous expiration date.
What the MD-102 Renewal Assessment Covers
The Intune and device management section of the renewal assessment typically covers new enrollment methods, updated configuration profile options, and changes to the Intune admin center interface. Expect questions about newly introduced policy types, app protection policy updates, and any changes to how managed devices are categorized or targeted. Microsoft has steadily expanded Intune's capabilities, so each renewal cycle tends to introduce questions about features that did not exist when the original MD-102 exam was written.
Recent renewal cycles have emphasized Microsoft's expanding support for non-Windows platforms within Intune, including updated management capabilities for macOS, iOS, and Android. Even though the MD-102 exam is Windows-focused, the renewal assessments reflect the real-world reality that endpoint administrators now manage heterogeneous device fleets. Candidates should review updates to cross-platform app deployment, conditional launch policies for mobile apps, and any changes to enrollment restrictions that apply across multiple operating systems.

Is the MD-102 Annual Renewal Worth It?
- +Completely free — no exam registration fees or voucher costs
- +Can be completed from home without a proctor or scheduled appointment
- +Open-book format allows reference to Microsoft documentation during the assessment
- +Forces a structured review of new features and platform changes annually
- +Retakes are unlimited with no mandatory waiting period between attempts
- +Keeps your Credly badge and LinkedIn certification current without re-sitting a full exam
- −Must be completed within the 6-month renewal window or certification lapses
- −Assessment content changes each cycle, requiring fresh preparation each year
- −Missing the renewal window forces you to retake the full proctored MD-102 exam
- −Renewal assessments are not as rigorous, so some employers still prefer seeing exam retakes
- −Microsoft Learn session timeouts can interrupt progress mid-assessment
- −Learning path content may not cover all real-world Intune and endpoint scenarios you encounter
MD-102 Renewal Prep Checklist
- ✓Log in to learn.microsoft.com and confirm your certification's exact expiration date.
- ✓Verify your renewal window is open (within 6 months of expiration) before attempting the assessment.
- ✓Navigate to your certification dashboard and click the official renewal link — do not use third-party links.
- ✓Bookmark all Microsoft Learn modules listed in the official renewal learning paths.
- ✓Read through Microsoft Intune What's New documentation for the past 12 months.
- ✓Review Windows Autopatch release notes and any major configuration changes.
- ✓Study updated Entra ID (Azure Active Directory) features that affect endpoint conditional access.
- ✓Complete at least one pass through all linked renewal learning modules before starting the assessment.
- ✓Keep the Microsoft Learn documentation open in a second browser tab during the assessment for reference.
- ✓After passing, verify your updated expiration date appears on both your Learn dashboard and Credly profile.

You Cannot Start Early — But You Should Not Wait
The MD-102 renewal window opens exactly 6 months before your expiration date and cannot be started before that point. However, your renewed certification will expire one year from your original expiration date regardless of when during the window you complete the assessment. Start as soon as the window opens to give yourself maximum time and multiple retake attempts if needed — but know that completing it on day one gives you the same duration as completing it on the final day.
Developing a smart renewal strategy means treating the annual assessment as a learning exercise rather than a bureaucratic hurdle. The professionals who struggle most with renewal assessments are those who approach them with the assumption that day-to-day work experience is sufficient preparation. While hands-on experience with Microsoft Intune and Windows endpoint management is invaluable, the renewal assessment specifically targets documented changes and new features — many of which may not yet be deployed in your organization's tenant or may have been deployed without your direct involvement.
The most effective preparation strategy combines three inputs: the official Microsoft Learn renewal learning paths, Microsoft Intune's What's New monthly blog posts, and the Microsoft 365 message center entries that appeared in your tenant over the past year. The What's New documentation is particularly valuable because it is organized chronologically and clearly labels which features are new versus which are updates to existing functionality. Reading through 12 months of What's New entries typically takes two to three hours and gives you a comprehensive map of everything that has changed since your last certification date.
Practice questions remain one of the most efficient tools for renewal preparation, even though the renewal assessment itself is open-book. Working through practice questions under exam-like conditions — without looking up answers — reveals knowledge gaps faster than passive reading does. Areas where you consistently miss questions or feel uncertain deserve deeper review in the Microsoft Learn modules before you attempt the official assessment. The connectivity and deployment question sets available on PracticeTestGeeks are particularly useful for reinforcing the Intune and Windows deployment concepts most commonly tested in renewal cycles.
One underappreciated preparation technique is hands-on exploration of the Intune admin center's newer features. Microsoft's admin interface evolves frequently, and the renewal assessment sometimes includes questions about navigating to specific settings or identifying where a particular feature is configured within the new admin center layout.
If your organization has a test tenant or a developer tenant available through a Microsoft 365 Developer Program subscription, spending time clicking through the admin center and exploring newer features is time well spent. Understanding the actual location of settings reduces errors on scenario-based questions that describe an administrative task and ask where in the interface you would perform it.
Time management during the actual renewal assessment deserves attention even though there is no enforced time limit. Candidates who approach the assessment too casually — stopping frequently, taking long breaks, or getting distracted by documentation rabbit holes — often find themselves fatigued before completing all questions. The 30-to-45-minute estimate assumes steady focus. Setting aside a dedicated, uninterrupted block of time, closing non-essential browser tabs, and treating the assessment with the same seriousness as a proctored exam produces better results than a casual, fragmented approach spread across a workday.
After your first renewal, keep a running document tracking Microsoft announcements and feature releases throughout the year. A simple shared note in OneNote or a bookmarks folder in Edge dedicated to Microsoft 365 release notes makes each subsequent renewal significantly easier. When the renewal window opens for year two, you will have a curated list of changes to review rather than having to reconstruct 12 months of updates from scratch. This longitudinal approach to staying current also benefits your daily work and positions you as the go-to expert when colleagues have questions about new Intune capabilities or policy changes.
Finally, consider the renewal as an opportunity to validate skills you use every day. The Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate credential signals to employers that you maintain current, verified knowledge of endpoint management best practices — not just that you passed an exam several years ago.
IT hiring managers and procurement teams increasingly distinguish between candidates with active certifications and those with lapsed credentials, and annual renewal directly supports the perception that you invest in staying current. The 30 to 45 minutes the renewal takes each year is one of the highest-return professional development investments available to a Windows endpoint administrator.
If your MD-102 certification expires before you complete the renewal assessment, it will lapse and you must pass the full proctored MD-102 exam again to regain the credential. Microsoft does not offer grace periods or late renewals after the expiration date. Set a calendar reminder for 6 months before your expiration date so you are ready to start the moment your renewal window opens, and add a second reminder at the 30-day mark as a final safety net.
After successfully renewing your MD-102 certification, the immediate next step is verifying that all downstream systems reflect the update. Your Microsoft Learn profile updates automatically, but Credly — the digital badge platform Microsoft uses for certification badges — typically takes 24 to 48 hours to sync.
Log in to your Credly account and check that the badge expiration date has updated. If it has not updated after 48 hours, you can trigger a manual sync by visiting your Microsoft Learn certifications page and using the option to share or re-issue the badge to Credly. If problems persist, Microsoft's certification support team can assist with badge synchronization issues.
LinkedIn is the professional network where Microsoft certifications have the most visibility, and keeping your LinkedIn profile current matters for career opportunities. LinkedIn pulls certification data from Credly when you add or update a certification entry. After your Credly badge updates, visit your LinkedIn certifications section, find the MD-102 entry, and update the expiration date manually if LinkedIn does not auto-populate the change.
Some users find that deleting and re-adding the certification from their Credly profile forces a fresh sync with LinkedIn. This small administrative task takes five minutes but ensures recruiters, hiring managers, and colleagues see an active, current credential rather than an approaching or past expiration date.
Beyond the administrative updates, the period immediately after renewal is an ideal time to deepen your expertise in the topic areas the renewal assessment highlighted as recently updated. If you found yourself less confident on questions related to Windows Autopatch, for example, that is a signal to spend additional time in your production or test environment exploring those features. The renewal assessment content represents Microsoft's judgment about what is most important for currently practicing endpoint administrators to know, making it a reliable guide to where the platform is heading and where investing learning time yields the most practical return.
Consider sharing your renewal experience with colleagues who also hold the MD-102 certification. Many organizations have teams of endpoint administrators who all certified around the same time, meaning their renewal windows open simultaneously. Coordinating a group study session using the Microsoft Learn modules, comparing notes on which topics feel most updated, and discussing the scenario-based questions in the context of your organization's actual environment converts the individual renewal exercise into a team upskilling opportunity. Organizations that treat certification renewals as shared learning events rather than individual administrative tasks consistently develop stronger collective expertise.
The Microsoft 365 Certified: Endpoint Administrator Associate certification pairs well with several adjacent certifications that share topic overlap, including the SC-300 Microsoft Identity and Access Administrator and the MD-101 Managing Modern Desktops certifications (noting that MD-101 was retired and folded into the current MD-102 exam structure). If you are considering expanding your certification portfolio after renewing MD-102, the Microsoft security operations and identity tracks offer natural career progression for endpoint administrators who want to move toward broader security or architecture roles.
The skills you reinforce through annual MD-102 renewal — especially around Entra ID integration and endpoint compliance — directly support the prerequisites for these adjacent tracks.
Staying engaged with the Microsoft community between renewal cycles significantly eases each year's renewal preparation. The Microsoft Tech Community forums, the Intune subreddit, and the Windows Administrator community on LinkedIn are active sources of information about feature releases, configuration gotchas, and policy changes that sometimes appear in renewal assessments before they are broadly documented in official Microsoft Learn content.
Following the Intune product team's blog and the Microsoft 365 Insider program feeds keeps you ahead of the learning curve rather than scrambling to catch up when the renewal window opens. Active community engagement and certification renewal together create a professional development flywheel that compounds over time, continuously deepening your practical expertise and keeping your credentials aligned with the current state of the platform.
Ultimately, the MD-102 renewal system rewards endpoint administrators who stay engaged with the Microsoft 365 platform year-round. The annual assessment is not designed to be a trap or a revenue opportunity for Microsoft — it is a mechanism for ensuring that certified professionals reflect current platform capabilities rather than a snapshot of the platform from however many years ago they first sat the exam. Embracing that philosophy transforms the renewal from a checkbox exercise into a meaningful annual review that keeps your skills, your credentials, and your professional reputation exactly where they should be.
Practical preparation for the MD-102 renewal assessment starts well before the renewal window opens, and the most effective candidates treat it as an ongoing process rather than a last-minute sprint. The single most impactful habit you can build is subscribing to Microsoft Intune's What's New RSS feed or checking the documentation page monthly. Each entry clearly labels new features, changed behaviors, and deprecated functionality — exactly the categories most likely to appear in renewal assessment questions. A 15-minute monthly review converts a potentially overwhelming annual catch-up into a manageable, rolling familiarity with the platform's evolution.
Scenario-based thinking is the key skill that distinguishes candidates who pass renewal assessments comfortably from those who struggle despite reviewing all the documentation. Microsoft's renewal questions rarely ask for isolated facts like a specific default timeout value. Instead, they present a business scenario — an organization experiencing a specific problem with device compliance, an administrator trying to configure a new Autopilot deployment profile, a situation where Windows Update policies are conflicting — and ask what action the administrator should take. Practicing this scenario-based reasoning through realistic practice questions is more effective preparation than memorizing documentation lists.
Hands-on lab practice fills the gap between documentation review and genuine understanding. If your organization's production environment does not include the newest Intune features, explore the Microsoft 365 Developer Program, which provides a free Microsoft 365 E5 developer tenant that can be used to configure and test Intune policies without affecting any production users or devices.
Working through common endpoint management scenarios in a live tenant — enrolling a test Windows 11 device, creating compliance policies, deploying a Win32 app, configuring a Windows Update ring — builds the kind of intuitive familiarity that makes scenario-based assessment questions feel straightforward rather than ambiguous.
Understanding the scoring model helps calibrate your preparation intensity. While Microsoft does not publish exact question counts or weightings for renewal assessments, the linked learning paths provide a reliable proxy for topic weighting. Learning paths with more modules and more time-to-complete estimates represent areas that will likely have more assessment coverage. When allocating your study hours, weight your time proportionally to the learning path depth rather than distributing effort equally across all topic areas. This targeted approach ensures you are maximally prepared in the highest-coverage areas while still maintaining baseline familiarity with everything the renewal covers.
Test anxiety is not a significant factor in MD-102 renewal assessments given the open-book format and unlimited retakes, but cognitive fatigue is real. If you attempt the assessment and feel like you are guessing on more than a quarter of the questions, it is better to note which topics felt uncertain and return after a focused review session rather than proceeding through the remaining questions in a fatigued state.
The lack of a waiting period between attempts is specifically designed to support this study-attempt-study cycle. Treating each attempt as a diagnostic rather than a definitive test reduces pressure and improves learning efficiency.
Building a personal reference sheet before sitting the renewal assessment is another practical preparation step. As you work through the Microsoft Learn modules, jot down key configuration steps, important parameter names, and common gotchas in a single document you can quickly scan during the assessment.
Keep it organized by topic — Intune enrollment, Autopilot, Windows Update, compliance policies, endpoint security — so you can navigate to the relevant section quickly when a question triggers uncertainty. This reference sheet also becomes a valuable personal knowledge base for future renewal cycles and daily work situations where you need to recall a specific configuration detail under pressure.
Finally, celebrate the credential renewal as a professional milestone worth acknowledging. Endpoint administration is a technically demanding discipline, and maintaining current certification demonstrates a commitment to the field that employers, clients, and colleagues recognize and value.
Share your renewed credential on LinkedIn with a brief note about what you learned during the process — the engagement from peers in the Microsoft 365 community is consistently positive and often surfaces connections with other professionals facing similar renewal questions. Your experience navigating the renewal process is genuinely useful to others, and sharing it contributes to the community that has likely helped you with technical questions throughout your career.
MD-102 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.
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