Cloud Practitioner or Solutions Architect first?
A factual comparison of the AWS entry point most learners ask about.
Exam details
| Detail | CLF-C02 (Cloud Practitioner) | SAA-C03 (Solutions Architect Associate) |
|---|---|---|
| Tier | Foundational | Associate |
| Question count | 65 | 65 |
| Duration | 90 min | 130 min |
| Passing score | 700 | 720 |
| Cost (USD) | $100 | $150 |
| Recommended experience | Up to 6 months general AWS exposure | ~1 year designing on AWS |
| Target audience | Sales, finance, project managers, IT-adjacent roles | Hands-on architects and engineers |
| Validity | 3 years | 3 years |
| Hands-on coding required? | No | Indirect — read CLI/SDK calls |
| Typical study hours | 20–40 hours | 60–100 hours |
Where each one wins
CLF-C02 wins on…
- – Cheaper ($100 vs $150)
- – Shorter (90 vs 130 minutes)
- – Easier ramp for non-technical roles
- – Confidence builder before SAA
- – Useful for sales / finance / PM positioning
SAA-C03 wins on…
- – Higher employer signal
- – Counts toward the AWS Pro-tier path
- – Real architecture knowledge transfer
- – Skips a redundant exam if you have AWS exposure
- – Often required for cloud-engineer roles
We recommend…
If you already work with or near AWS: skip CLF-C02 and go straight to SAA-C03. The Cloud Practitioner is a confidence builder, not a career-grade credential — and SAA covers all the same foundational ground in its own scope.
If you are completely new to cloud or in a non-engineering role (sales, finance, project management, IT support that does not touch AWS daily): start with CLF-C02. It costs $50 less, is 40 minutes shorter, and gives you a real credential without the architecture depth.
Both exams are valid for three years. Both are offered in English, Japanese, Korean, German, Portuguese, and several other languages. Pricing is identical worldwide via Pearson VUE.