The current Security+ certification is not a generic “cyber” badge. CompTIA frames SY0-701 around five weighted domains, hands-on performance-based work, and a fixed exam window of 90 minutes. The voucher price is $425, the exam can include maximum of 90 questions, and the passing score is 750 on a scale of 100-900. If you are trying to figure out Security+ architecture design domain, those official details are the starting point.
What shifted the most toward architecture, cloud, and modern environments on SY0-701?
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+.
What architecture themes matter here?
Security+ expects you to compare on-premises, cloud, virtualization, IoT, ICS, and infrastructure-as-code environments through a security lens. That means thinking about where controls live, how segmentation changes, how data is classified, what resilience looks like, and where backups and continuity planning fit. Architecture questions often hide inside scenario wording that sounds like operations. The clue is whether the best answer changes the design rather than an individual endpoint.
How can you build a small Security+ lab without overspending?
A realistic home lab does not need enterprise hardware. One laptop with enough memory for a few virtual machines can host a Windows client, a Linux box, and a firewall or monitoring VM. Add Wireshark for packet visibility, Nmap for discovery, a simple syslog source, and an intentionally vulnerable web app on an isolated network. The goal is not to become a penetration tester in one weekend. The goal is to make terms such as segmentation, services, ports, certificate warnings, DNS behavior, and log review concrete enough that PBQs feel familiar.
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.