The Google Cloud Digital Leader is the entry point for non-technical professionals who need to understand cloud, talk credibly about Google Cloud, and connect technology to business outcomes. Build that fluency by practicing the way the real exam asks.
Honest answer: it depends on what you want from it. The Cloud Digital Leader (CDL) is a foundational, business-oriented certification. It is not a hands-on engineering exam, and it will not on its own qualify you for a cloud architect or DevOps role. What it does well is give non-technical people a structured, credible way to understand cloud technology and how Google Cloud creates business value.
It tends to be a good fit if you are:
If your goal is a technical cloud engineering job, treat the CDL as a warm-up, not a destination. The Associate Cloud Engineer and the professional-level certifications carry more weight for hands-on roles. For business and cloud-adjacent careers, the CDL hits a real need: it proves you can speak the language of cloud and reason about trade-offs, which is exactly the gap many non-technical professionals have.
Google's official exam guide organizes the Cloud Digital Leader into six sections, weighted at roughly 16 to 17 percent each. The questions are scenario-based: you read a short business situation and choose the Google Cloud approach that best fits, rather than recalling commands or syntax.
| Time limit | 90 minutes |
| Number of questions | 50-60 multiple choice and multiple select |
| Level | Foundational (no hands-on or coding required) |
| Prerequisites | None listed by Google |
| Registration fee | $99 USD, plus tax where applicable (confirm on Google's site) |
| Result | Pass or fail (no published score) |
| Validity | 3 years |
| Vendor | Google Cloud |
Read Google's exam guide first and use its six sections as your checklist. Every topic you see on the real exam maps back to it.
This exam rewards understanding what a service is for and when to use it. Focus on the role of products like BigQuery, GKE, and Cloud Run rather than configuration details.
Questions are framed as business scenarios. Practice asking "what outcome does this organization need?" and matching it to a Google Cloud capability.
Work through realistic questions, read the explanation for every answer, and revisit the sections where you miss the most. Repetition under time pressure is what closes the gap.
A common rhythm for candidates with some general tech familiarity is two to four weeks of part-time study: a pass through Google's learning path and exam guide, then steady practice-question sessions until your weak sections stop being weak. There is no official study-time figure, so give yourself more room if cloud concepts are brand new to you.
Reading about cloud and answering a timed scenario question are two different skills. The Cloud Digital Leader exam is built almost entirely from scenario questions, so the fastest way to find out whether you actually understand a concept is to test yourself on it. Practice questions surface the gaps that passive reading hides.
Good practice does three things: it shows you the question phrasing and answer-choice style before exam day, it tells you precisely which of the six sections you are weak in, and it builds the habit of choosing the best business fit under a 90-minute clock. Every GetMyCert question comes with a worked explanation of why the right answer is right and why each distractor is wrong, so each attempt teaches you something instead of just scoring you.
Always confirm exam details and pricing against Google's own pages, since they can change:
Work through original Cloud Digital Leader questions with an explanation on every answer. Find your weak sections, then close them.
Start practicing free