AZ-900 Sample Questions: Practice for Azure Fundamentals
AZ-900 sample questions with explanations — practice the real exam format, understand key Azure concepts, and know what to expect on test day.

AZ-900 Sample Questions: What to Expect
The AZ-900 Microsoft Azure Fundamentals exam has a reputation for being accessible, but "accessible" doesn't mean you can walk in cold and pass. The questions test conceptual understanding of cloud services and Azure-specific terminology — and if you've never worked directly with Azure, some of it will feel unfamiliar even after studying.
Microsoft doesn't publish an official bank of sample questions (beyond a small set in the exam skills outline), but the question style is consistent across practice exams and the real test: straightforward multiple choice, scenario-based questions, and occasionally drag-and-drop or matching formats for concept pairing. Most questions have four answer choices.
Here's what the actual exam looks like in practice — and sample questions that reflect the kinds of things you'll need to know.
AZ-900 Sample Questions by Domain
Cloud Concepts (25–30% of exam)
Q: A company wants to avoid upfront hardware costs and pay only for the computing resources they use. Which cloud model does this describe?
A) Private cloud B) Hybrid cloud C) Public cloud D) On-premises
Answer: C — Public cloud. Public cloud providers like Microsoft Azure let customers pay for resources on a consumption basis without owning the underlying infrastructure. Private cloud involves infrastructure you manage yourself; hybrid combines both.
Q: Which of the following is an example of a capital expenditure (CapEx) in IT?
A) Monthly Azure subscription fees B) Purchasing a physical server C) Paying for cloud storage per gigabyte D) Scaling a virtual machine up during peak traffic
Answer: B — Purchasing a physical server. CapEx involves upfront investment in physical assets. Azure services are operational expenditures (OpEx) — ongoing costs that scale with usage.
Azure Architecture and Services (35–40%)
Q: Which Azure service provides a fully managed relational database with built-in high availability?
A) Azure Blob Storage B) Azure SQL Database C) Azure Table Storage D) Azure Cache for Redis
Answer: B — Azure SQL Database. It's a PaaS offering — fully managed, with automatic backups, patching, and high availability built in. Blob Storage is object storage; Table Storage is NoSQL; Redis is for caching.
Q: A company wants to deploy virtual machines in multiple Azure regions to maximize uptime. Which feature should they use?
A) Availability Sets B) Azure Scale Sets C) Availability Zones D) Azure Load Balancer
Answer: C — Availability Zones. Availability Zones are physically separate datacenters within a region. Availability Sets protect against hardware failures within a single datacenter. Scale Sets handle automatic scaling. Load Balancer distributes traffic but doesn't itself provide geographic redundancy.
More AZ-900 Sample Questions: Security and Compliance
Azure Management and Governance (30–35%)
Q: Which Azure service allows you to evaluate your resources against organizational policies and identify non-compliant resources?
A) Azure Advisor B) Microsoft Defender for Cloud C) Azure Policy D) Azure Monitor
Answer: C — Azure Policy. Azure Policy lets you create, assign, and manage policies that enforce rules on Azure resources. Advisor gives optimization recommendations; Defender for Cloud focuses on security posture; Monitor handles logging and alerts.
Q: A company wants to control which Azure services its employees can use in each subscription. What should they configure?
A) Azure RBAC B) Azure Policy C) Azure Blueprints D) Conditional Access
Answer: B — Azure Policy. Azure Policy can restrict which services are allowed to be deployed. RBAC controls who can do what (access control), not what services can be created. Blueprints bundle policies and RBAC for environment setup; Conditional Access is for identity-based access control in Azure AD.
Q: Which pricing tool helps estimate the monthly cost of Azure services before deploying anything?
A) Azure Cost Management B) Azure Advisor C) Azure Pricing Calculator D) Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Calculator
Answer: C — Azure Pricing Calculator. The Pricing Calculator lets you estimate costs for specific Azure services you plan to deploy. The TCO Calculator compares the cost of on-premises infrastructure versus Azure migration. Cost Management monitors actual spending; Advisor gives optimization recommendations after deployment.
What Makes AZ-900 Questions Tricky
The exam doesn't test whether you can configure Azure services — it tests whether you understand what they do, when to use them, and how they relate to each other. Most wrong answers are plausible. The distractors are carefully chosen to catch people who know a service name but don't understand its specific purpose.
Common trap patterns:
- Confusing IaaS, PaaS, SaaS — know the responsibility boundary for each. IaaS: you manage OS and up. PaaS: you manage application and data. SaaS: Microsoft manages everything.
- Availability Sets vs. Availability Zones vs. Regions — these operate at different levels and protect against different failure types.
- Azure AD vs. traditional Active Directory — Azure AD is cloud-based identity, not an extension of on-premises AD Domain Services.
- Cost Management vs. Pricing Calculator vs. TCO Calculator — each serves a different purpose and a different stage of the cloud lifecycle.
- Azure Policy vs. RBAC — Policy controls what resources can be created; RBAC controls who can perform actions. They're complementary but distinct.
AZ-900 Exam Format Facts
The AZ-900 exam typically has 40–60 questions and a 60-minute time limit. Passing score is 700 out of 1000. Question types include multiple choice, select-all-that-apply, drag-and-drop, and scenario-based questions. You can't go back to previous questions in some sections — read carefully before answering.
The AZ-900 certification doesn't expire in the traditional sense, but Microsoft credentials become "current" status when your skills are validated against the latest exam content. It's worth checking whether the content outline has been updated since you studied — Microsoft revises exam objectives periodically.
How to Use Sample Questions Effectively
Don't just check if you got the right answer. For every question — right or wrong — read the explanation and understand why the other options are wrong. That's where the learning happens for certification exams. The ability to eliminate wrong answers confidently is just as important as recognizing the correct one.
Group your wrong answers by topic domain. If you're consistently missing Governance questions, that's your study priority. If you're solid on Cloud Concepts but weak on specific Azure services, drill the services chapter harder. Random practice without analysis is less effective than targeted practice based on your actual error patterns.
Use sample questions as a diagnostic tool first, then as verification that your studying worked. Don't start with practice questions before you've built foundational knowledge — you'll just memorize answer patterns without understanding the underlying concepts, which won't serve you on the exam or in the real world.

Building Toward the AZ-900 Exam
Sample questions are most valuable when they expose gaps, not confirm what you already know. The best prep routine: read the Microsoft Learn modules for a domain, then immediately test yourself on sample questions for that domain. Don't wait until you've read everything — test as you go. Retrieval practice builds retention faster than re-reading.
By the time you've worked through all five domains and can correctly answer (and explain) 80%+ of your sample questions across all domains, you're likely ready. Most candidates take 2–4 weeks of focused preparation. Those with an IT background and some cloud exposure often prep in 1–2 weeks. Those coming in with no technical background should plan for 4–6 weeks.
The microsoft az 900 certification is designed to be achievable — it's an entry-level credential, not a deep technical one. But "entry-level" still requires systematic preparation. Walk in knowing your service categories, your governance tools, and your shared responsibility model cold, and the rest of the exam becomes manageable.
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.