Security+ is broad, vendor-neutral, and tied to real exam constraints rather than vague cybersecurity marketing. The current CompTIA exam is SY0-701. It costs $425, allows maximum of 90 questions in 90 minutes, and requires 750 on a scale of 100-900 to pass. Those numbers shape how you should interpret Security+ acronyms, because they tell you how much content you must cover and how quickly you must apply it.
What official exam details matter most here?
The basic exam mechanics are straightforward but easy to misread if you only scan marketing pages. The current exam code is SY0-701. CompTIA lists a maximum of maximum of 90 questions, 90 minutes of testing time, and a passing score of 750 on a scale of 100-900. The standard voucher price shown on CompTIA’s marketplace is $425 in the U.S. Many candidates budget only for the voucher and forget the downside of failure: a retake means buying time and another attempt. That is why cost discussions around Security+ should include at least one full practice cycle before scheduling the exam.
Why do these details change your strategy?
CompTIA’s official Security+ page lists these five SY0-701 domains and weights: General Security Concepts — 12%; Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Mitigations — 22%; Security Architecture — 18%; Security Operations — 28%; Security Program Management and Oversight — 20%. Those weights matter. Security Operations is 28%, so hardening, monitoring, vulnerability management, IAM operations, and incident response get more exam space than any other area. Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Mitigations follows at 22%, then Security Program Management and Oversight at 20%, Security Architecture at 18%, and General Security Concepts at 12%.
CompTIA also places performance-based items prominently in the exam experience. CompTIA’s own Security+ exam article says most PBQs appear at the beginning of the exam, before you see the bulk of the multiple-choice items. That detail changes test strategy because the hardest simulation-style work often lands while the clock still shows a full 90 minutes. Security+ renewal is also specific: CompTIA requires 50 CEUs in a three-year cycle, or another approved renewal path, and publishes a three-year CE fee total of $150 for Security+.
A strong Security+ study plan mirrors the domain weights instead of dividing time evenly. If you spend the same number of hours on General Security Concepts at 12% and Security Operations at 28%, you are overweighting the smallest bucket and underpreparing for the largest one. A better plan gives extra room to logging, monitoring, IAM operations, incident response, vulnerability management, and defensive tooling, then uses shorter review cycles for the general concepts bucket. That is also why PBQ practice matters. The exam starts with more hands-on work than many first-time candidates expect.
What should you do with this information next?
Treat Security+ as a weighted, scenario-driven exam rather than a generic cybersecurity quiz. Memorize the constants: SY0-701, $425, up to 90 questions, 90 minutes, 750 passing score, PBQs near the beginning, and the five domain weights. Then convert each domain into actions. Build a list of ports you can explain, not just recite. Walk through certificate trust step by step. Practice incident response as a sequence. Learn the difference between phishing, vishing, smishing, and whaling by modeling the attacker’s method. That is the level of specificity the exam rewards.
Our CompTIA Security+ study guide covers all five SY0-701 domains with domain-weighted practice questions, a performance-based question walkthrough, a ports and protocols cheat sheet, and a 6-week study schedule built around the exam’s actual content weighting. Available as an instant PDF download at securitypluscertprep.com/guide.