Prove you can lock down identity, networking, data, and threat response across Azure, hybrid, and multi-cloud. Study the way the exam actually tests, then walk in ready.
Short answer: yes, if you already work with Azure and want to specialize in security. The AZ-500 is a role-based, associate-level specialist exam, not an entry point. Microsoft's own audience profile describes someone who already implements, manages, and monitors security across Azure, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments. If that is the direction your career is heading, it maps cleanly to real job responsibilities.
Be honest with yourself about prerequisites. There is no required exam to sit AZ-500, but Microsoft expects practical Azure administration experience and strong familiarity with Microsoft Entra ID plus Azure compute, networking, and storage. In practice, most people who pass comfortably have already earned something like AZ-104 (Azure Administrator) or have equivalent hands-on time in the portal. If you have never built a virtual network or assigned an RBAC role, start there first, not here.
It is also not a guarantee of a job or a raise on its own. What it does well is signal to a hiring manager that you understand how Azure's security tooling fits together, and it forces you to learn services like Microsoft Defender for Cloud and Microsoft Sentinel in depth. Pair it with real project experience and it carries weight. Treat it as a checkbox with no hands-on practice and it will not.
The exam is organized into four skill areas. The weightings below are from Microsoft's official skills-measured outline dated January 22, 2026. Microsoft publishes ranges, not fixed counts, and updates the outline periodically, so verify against the official study guide before exam day. The standout takeaway: Defender for Cloud and Sentinel together are the single heaviest area.
Azure built-in and custom role assignments, Privileged Identity Management (PIM), MFA, Conditional Access, enterprise app access, app registrations, service principals, and managed identities in Microsoft Entra ID.
NSGs and ASGs, Virtual Network Manager, UDRs, VNet peering and VPN gateways, Private Endpoints and Private Link, Azure Firewall, Application Gateway, Front Door, Web Application Firewall, and DDoS Protection.
Azure Bastion and just-in-time VM access, AKS and container security, disk encryption, storage account access control and key management, BYOK, and SQL protections like TDE, dynamic data masking, and Always Encrypted.
Azure Policy and governance, Key Vault, Defender for Cloud Secure Score, compliance standards, workload protection plans, agentless scanning, and security monitoring and automation with Sentinel data connectors, analytics rules, and playbooks.
One scoring detail worth knowing: AZ-500 is scored on a scaled 100–1000 range, and 700 is the pass mark. That is not a raw 70% of questions correct, because items are weighted. Aim to be solidly competent across all four areas rather than betting on one.
| Exam Code | AZ-500 |
| Full Title | Exam AZ-500: Microsoft Azure Security Technologies |
| Credential Earned | Microsoft Certified: Azure Security Engineer Associate |
| Time Limit | 100 minutes (additional time may be available for non-native-language speakers and approved accommodations) |
| Passing Score | 700 out of 1000 (scaled) |
| Format | Mixed item types, including multiple choice, multiple response, and case studies. Microsoft does not publish a fixed question count, and it can vary by exam form. |
| Cost | Approximately 165 USD; Microsoft prices exams by country or region, so confirm your local price at checkout. |
| Renewal | Microsoft associate certifications expire annually and can be renewed for free with an online assessment on Microsoft Learn (while the certification remains active). |
| Retirement | Exam and certification retire August 31, 2026. Verify before booking. |
| Vendor | Microsoft |
This exam rewards hands-on familiarity over memorization. The questions are scenario-driven, so the people who struggle are usually the ones who read about a feature but never clicked through it. Here is a study path that works.
Spin up a free or pay-as-you-go subscription and actually configure NSGs, Conditional Access, a Key Vault, and Defender for Cloud. Use an Azure spending limit to stay safe, and tear resources down when you are done.
This area is the heaviest single block of the exam. Learn Secure Score, workload protection plans, data connectors, analytics rules, and automation playbooks until they feel routine, not theoretical.
Open Microsoft's study guide and turn every bullet into a yes/no question: can I do this in the portal and with CLI or PowerShell? Anything you cannot demo becomes your next lab.
Practice questions matter less for the score and more for exposing gaps. After each one, read the explanation for both the right answer and why the distractors are wrong, then go verify it in the docs.
A realistic timeline for someone already comfortable in Azure is roughly four to eight weeks of consistent study. If you are coming straight from AZ-104, lean into the security-specific services that administrator role does not cover in depth: Sentinel, Defender for Cloud workload plans, PIM, and the encryption options for storage and SQL.
Reading documentation tells you a feature exists. Practice questions tell you whether you can actually choose the right control under a constraint, which is exactly what AZ-500 measures. The exam loves scenarios where two answers are technically valid but only one fits the requirement, like least privilege, lowest cost, or least administrative overhead. You only get fast at that distinction by practicing it.
Good practice also rebuilds your sense of pacing. With a 100-minute clock and case studies that take time to read, you need to recognize patterns quickly and not burn ten minutes on a single question. Working through a bank of scenario items trains that instinct before you are sitting in the test center.
Most importantly, the value is in the review, not the raw percentage. When a practice item explains why the right answer wins and why each distractor fails, every question becomes a mini-lesson. GetMyCert's AZ-500 items are written to do exactly that: original, scenario-based questions with clear explanations that point you back toward the underlying Azure concept.
Always treat Microsoft's own pages as the source of truth for dates, pricing, and the current skills outline:
Work through original, scenario-based AZ-500 questions with explanations that show you why each answer is right or wrong, so review time actually builds skill.
Start Practicing on GetMyCert