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CompTIA A+ Core 2 (220-1102)

The second of two exams you need for the A+ credential. Core 2 is the software half: operating systems, security, software troubleshooting, and the day-to-day procedures of a working IT support tech.

Passing Score
700 / 900
Questions
Up to 90
Time Limit
90 minutes
Question Types
Multiple choice + PBQs

A+ needs both Core 1 and Core 2

One exam does not earn you the A+. To get certified you must pass both the Core 1 exam (220-1101) and the Core 2 exam (220-1102). They are separate sittings with separate fees, and you can take them in either order. This page covers Core 2 (220-1102) only.

Core 1 leans toward hardware, networking, mobile devices, virtualization, and hardware troubleshooting. Core 2 is the software-focused exam: operating systems, security, software troubleshooting, and operational procedures. Many candidates find Core 2 the heavier reading load because security and procedures cover a lot of terminology.

Bottom line: passing 220-1102 alone does not make you A+ certified. It is one of two required exams. Plan your time and budget for both.

Is the A+ worth it?

Honestly, it depends on where you are in your career. The A+ is an entry-level certification. It is not going to land you a senior engineering role on its own, and people already working in IT often skip it. What it does well is open the first door.

If you are trying to break into IT with little or no professional experience, the A+ is one of the most widely requested credentials for help desk, desktop support, and field technician roles. It signals to a hiring manager that you understand how computers, operating systems, and basic security actually work, which is exactly what those first jobs need. CompTIA recommends roughly 9 to 12 months of hands-on experience before sitting the exams, but plenty of people pass while studying their way in.

Where it is probably not worth it: if you already have a year or more of real IT support experience, or you are aiming straight at a specialization like security or cloud, your time may be better spent on a higher-level cert. Be honest with yourself about your starting point.

What's on the Core 2 (220-1102) exam

CompTIA splits 220-1102 into four domains. The percentages below are the official exam weights, so they tell you exactly where to spend your study hours.

1. Operating Systems

31% of the exam

The single largest domain. Windows editions and features, installation and upgrade methods, the command line, Control Panel and Settings, system utilities, plus working knowledge of macOS, Linux, and the major mobile operating systems and their file systems.

2. Security

25% of the exam

Physical and logical security measures, wireless security protocols and authentication, malware types and removal, social engineering and common threats, secure workstation configuration, and basic data destruction and disposal.

3. Software Troubleshooting

22% of the exam

Diagnosing and resolving Windows OS problems, PC and mobile OS application issues, malware symptoms and remediation steps in the correct order, and mobile device security concerns.

4. Operational Procedures

22% of the exam

Documentation and change management, backup and recovery methods, safety and environmental procedures, privacy and licensing concepts, communication and professionalism, and basic scripting concepts. People often underestimate this domain.

Expect a mix of standard multiple-choice questions and performance-based questions (PBQs), where you complete a task or work through a simulated scenario rather than just picking an answer. PBQs usually appear at the start of the exam, so do not let them eat all your time.

220-1102 exam details

Exam code 220-1102 (Core 2)
Number of questions Maximum of 90
Question types Multiple choice (single and multiple response) and performance-based questions
Time limit 90 minutes
Passing score 700 on a scale of 100 to 900
Recommended experience About 9 to 12 months of hands-on IT support experience
Required for A+ Yes, alongside Core 1 (220-1101)
Vendor CompTIA

Always confirm current pricing, scheduling, and policy details on CompTIA's official site before you register.

How to study for Core 2

  1. Start from the official objectives. Download the 220-1102 objectives PDF from CompTIA and treat every bullet as a checklist. The exam will not test anything outside it.
  2. Weight your hours by domain. Operating Systems and Security together make up more than half the exam. Spend your time accordingly instead of dividing it evenly.
  3. Get hands-on. Reading about Task Manager, the registry, or removing malware is not the same as doing it. Use a spare machine or a free virtual machine to actually click through Windows, macOS, and Linux.
  4. Practice the order of operations. Many troubleshooting and malware-removal questions test the correct sequence of steps, not just the right tool. Memorize the recommended steps.
  5. Drill with practice questions, then review every miss. The point of practice is to find the gaps in your knowledge while it is still cheap to fix them.
  6. Do timed runs near the end. Simulate 90 minutes so the clock and PBQs do not surprise you on exam day.

Why practice questions matter

Reading a study guide builds recognition. You see a term, it looks familiar, and you feel ready. The exam asks for something harder: recall under time pressure, applied to a scenario you have not seen before. Practice questions are how you find the difference between "I have read this" and "I can answer this."

Good practice does three things. It surfaces the topics you only think you know. It trains you to read questions the way CompTIA writes them, including the "choose the best answer" wording where several options look correct. And the explanations turn a wrong answer into a lesson instead of just a red X.

That is what GetMyCert focuses on: original practice questions with written explanations for why the right answer is right and why each distractor is wrong, so each attempt actually teaches you something.

Official resources

Go straight to the source for objectives, pricing, and registration:

Frequently asked questions

What is the passing score for 220-1102?

You need 700 on a scale of 100 to 900. The exam is scaled, so it is not a simple percentage of questions correct.

How many questions are on the Core 2 exam?

A maximum of 90 questions, a mix of multiple-choice and performance-based questions, with a 90-minute time limit.

Do I need both Core 1 and Core 2 to earn the A+?

Yes. The A+ credential requires passing both Core 1 (220-1101) and Core 2 (220-1102). Passing only one does not certify you. You can take them in either order.

What topics does Core 2 cover?

Four domains: Operating Systems (31%), Security (25%), Software Troubleshooting (22%), and Operational Procedures (22%).

What are performance-based questions (PBQs)?

PBQs ask you to complete a task or work through a simulated scenario instead of just selecting an answer. They typically appear early in the exam, so manage your time so they do not consume the whole session.

How long should I study for Core 2?

It varies with your background. CompTIA suggests around 9 to 12 months of hands-on IT support experience overall. With consistent daily study, many candidates prepare for Core 2 specifically over several weeks to a few months.

Is Core 2 harder than Core 1?

It is subjective. Core 1 is more hardware and networking; Core 2 is more software, security, and procedures with a lot of terminology to memorize. Many candidates find Core 2 a heavier reading load, but difficulty depends on your strengths.

Are GetMyCert's questions the real exam questions?

No. GetMyCert offers original practice questions written to match the 220-1102 objectives. They are study material, not actual exam content, and GetMyCert is not affiliated with CompTIA.

Test what you actually know

Work through original 220-1102 practice questions with explanations, then go back to the objectives you missed.

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