Introduction: Two Great Certifications, Very Different Purposes
Ask ten cybersecurity professionals which certification you should pursue, and at least eight of them will mention either Security+ or CISSP. Both are vendor-neutral. Both are globally recognized. Both appear on job postings constantly. Yet pursuing the wrong one at the wrong stage of your career can cost you months of effort and hundreds of dollars with little to show for it.
The confusion is understandable. On the surface, both certifications look similar — they’re both issued by reputable organizations, both cover broad cybersecurity domains, and both carry weight with employers. But beneath the surface, they serve completely different purposes and target completely different professionals.
This guide will help you understand exactly what each certification is, who it’s designed for, and — most importantly — which one you should pursue right now given where you are in your career.
Understanding CompTIA Security+
CompTIA Security+ (currently exam SY0-701) is an entry-to-mid-level cybersecurity certification designed to validate foundational security knowledge and skills. It’s issued by CompTIA, a vendor-neutral, non-profit trade association that has been producing IT certifications since 1993.
The exam covers six primary domains. Threats, attacks, and vulnerabilities make up roughly 22 percent of the content and cover malware types, social engineering, application vulnerabilities, and threat intelligence concepts. Architecture and design covers security frameworks, cloud security concepts, virtualization, and secure application development. Implementation covers cryptography, PKI, wireless security, and endpoint security configurations. Operations and incident response cover log analysis, digital forensics concepts, and incident handling procedures. Governance, risk, and compliance covers regulations, data privacy, organizational policies, and risk management frameworks.
The exam consists of up to 90 questions — a mix of multiple choice and performance-based questions — and must be completed in 90 minutes. A score of 750 out of 900 is required to pass. There are no mandatory prerequisites, though CompTIA recommends the Network+ certification and at least two years of IT experience with a security focus as preparation.
One particularly significant feature of Security+ is its DoD 8570 compliance. This means it satisfies the baseline certification requirement for multiple US Department of Defense Information Assurance roles. For professionals interested in government, military, or defense contractor positions, Security+ is often a requirement rather than a preference.
Understanding CISSP
CISSP (Certified Information Systems Security Professional) is issued by ISC2 and is widely regarded as the most prestigious cybersecurity certification in existence. It’s not an entry-level or even mid-level credential — it’s a senior-level certification designed for experienced security professionals who manage, design, or architect enterprise security programs.
The exam covers eight Common Body of Knowledge (CBK) domains. Security and risk management covers ethics, legal issues, governance frameworks, and risk management — this domain alone makes up 15 percent of the exam. Asset security covers data classification, ownership, and retention. Security architecture and engineering covers cryptography, security models, and vulnerabilities in enterprise architectures. Communications and network security covers secure network architectures and protocols. Identity and access management covers authentication systems, access control models, and identity federation. Security assessment and testing covers audit strategies, vulnerability assessments, and penetration testing concepts. Security operations covers incident management, disaster recovery, and physical security. Software development security covers secure coding practices and software development lifecycle security.
The exam uses an adaptive testing format ranging from 125 to 175 questions over four hours. The adaptive format means the exam adjusts difficulty based on your performance — stronger candidates may finish in 125 questions, while others face up to 175. A scaled score of 700 is required to pass.
Critically, to earn the CISSP designation you must have five years of paid, full-time work experience in at least two of the eight CBK domains. Without this experience, you can still pass the exam and earn the title of Associate of ISC2 — but you cannot use the CISSP designation until you fulfill the experience requirement.
Head-to-Head Comparison
Experience required:
Security+ has no mandatory experience requirement. CISSP requires five years of qualifying professional experience. This single factor is often the deciding one.
Exam difficulty:
Security+ is considered moderate difficulty for candidates with basic IT and security knowledge. CISSP is considered one of the most challenging certification exams in IT — not because of obscure content, but because of the sheer breadth of material and the depth of managerial and conceptual thinking required.
Focus:
Security+ focuses on technical implementation and practical security concepts. CISSP focuses on strategic, managerial, and architectural security thinking. CISSP candidates are expected to think like a senior security manager making enterprise-wide decisions, not just a technical practitioner.
Salary impact:
Security+ typically moves salaries into the $75,000–$95,000 range for early-career professionals. CISSP holders regularly earn $120,000–$165,000, with senior and executive roles exceeding $180,000.
Time to prepare:
Most Security+ candidates need six to ten weeks of focused study. CISSP candidates typically need four to six months of intensive preparation, and many attempt it multiple times.
Renewal:
Security+ requires 50 CE credits every three years. CISSP requires 120 CPE credits every three years across multiple domains.
Who Should Choose Security+?
You should pursue Security+ if you have fewer than three years of IT or security experience, you’re transitioning into cybersecurity from general IT, networking, or help desk roles, you’re targeting entry-level or associate security analyst positions, you need a certification quickly to qualify for a specific role, or you’re pursuing government or DoD positions that specifically require it.
Security+ is also the right choice if you’ve never held a dedicated security role. Attempting CISSP without real security experience and deep foundational knowledge is setting yourself up for failure — and failure on the CISSP exam is expensive and demoralizing.
For Security+ preparation, using realistic practice questions from a trusted source is critical. CompTIA Security+ exam dumps on CertEmpire offer up-to-date questions that reflect the current SY0-701 exam objectives with detailed explanations for every answer — which helps you understand concepts rather than just memorize responses.
Who Should Choose CISSP?
You should pursue CISSP if you have five or more years of hands-on security experience across multiple domains, you’re currently in or targeting security management, security architect, or CISO roles, you want the credential that carries the most weight at the senior level, or you’re working in an environment where CISSP is explicitly required or preferred for advancement.
CISSP is also worth pursuing if you’ve already earned Security+ and other mid-level credentials and are ready for a senior-level challenge that will meaningfully differentiate you from other candidates in executive-level hiring processes.
Can You Pursue Both?
Absolutely, and many successful cybersecurity professionals do. The typical career arc looks like this: Security+ in years two to three of an IT career, followed by specialized certifications like CEH or CySA+ in the mid-career phase, then CISSP after reaching the five-year experience threshold. Each certification builds on the knowledge and credibility of the previous one.
A Note on the Associate of ISC2 Pathway
If you’re interested in CISSP but don’t yet have five years of qualifying experience, ISC2 offers an Associate of ISC2 pathway. You take the full CISSP exam — same content, same difficulty — and if you pass, you earn the Associate of ISC2 designation. You then have six years to fulfill the experience requirement and upgrade to full CISSP status. This pathway is worth considering for ambitious professionals who want to tackle the exam while their study momentum is high, even before they’ve accumulated the required experience.
Final Thoughts
Security+ and CISSP are both outstanding certifications — but they belong to different chapters of a cybersecurity career. Security+ opens the door to the field. CISSP marks your arrival as a senior leader within it. Be honest about where you are right now, choose the certification that matches your current stage, and build a disciplined study plan that gives you the best possible chance of passing on your first attempt.
If you’re looking for certification study materials for Security+ or CISSP, checking out security certification resources at CertMage can give you additional practice options alongside your primary study plan.






