AWS Just Renamed the SysOps Exam and Nobody Noticed — Here's What SOA-C03 Actually Tests Now
If you're still studying for the "AWS SysOps Administrator" exam, I have bad news: it doesn't exist anymore. AWS quietly renamed it to AWS Certified CloudOps Engineer – Associate (SOA-C03) in September 2025. The old SOA-C02 is dead. And the new exam isn't just a rebrand — the content shifted signifi
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If you're still studying for the "AWS SysOps Administrator" exam, I have bad news: it doesn't exist anymore.
AWS quietly renamed it to AWS Certified CloudOps Engineer – Associate (SOA-C03) in September 2025. The old SOA-C02 is dead. And the new exam isn't just a rebrand — the content shifted significantly toward modern operations patterns that most study guides haven't caught up with yet.
I spent the last month digging into the SOA-C03 exam guide, talking to people who've taken it, and comparing it to the old version. Here's what actually changed and why it matters.
The Name Change Isn't Cosmetic
AWS didn't just slap a new label on the same exam. "CloudOps Engineer" signals a shift from reactive system administration to proactive cloud operations engineering. Think less "fix the server" and more "design systems that don't break in the first place."
The old SysOps exam tested whether you could keep existing infrastructure running. The new one tests whether you can architect for reliability, automate everything, and optimize at scale.
The New Domain Breakdown
Here's what the SOA-C03 actually covers:
- Domain 1: Monitoring, Logging, Analysis, Remediation & Performance Optimization (22%) — CloudWatch, X-Ray, EventBridge, and the new emphasis on proactive remediation
- Domain 2: Reliability and Business Continuity (18%) — Disaster recovery, multi-Region architectures, backup strategies
- Domain 3: Deployment, Provisioning, and Automation (18%) — CloudFormation, CDK, Systems Manager, and heavier IaC emphasis
- Domain 4: Security and Compliance (16%) — IAM policies, SCPs, encryption, and compliance automation
- Domain 5: Networking and Content Delivery (14%) — VPC design, Route 53, CloudFront optimization
- Domain 6: Cost and Performance Optimization (12%) — Cost Explorer, Reserved Instances vs Savings Plans, right-sizing
The biggest shift? Domain 1 now combines what used to be separate monitoring and troubleshooting sections, and adds performance optimization into the mix. If you're used to the old format, this domain alone could trip you up.
What's Actually New (That Old Guides Don't Cover)
Here's what caught people off guard:
Multi-account governance with AWS Organizations and SCPs — The old exam barely touched this. SOA-C03 expects you to understand cross-account strategies deeply.
Container and serverless operations — ECS, Fargate, and Lambda operational patterns are now fair game. The old exam was almost entirely EC2-focused.
Advanced observability — Not just "set up a CloudWatch alarm." The exam tests distributed tracing with X-Ray, composite alarms, and Container Insights.
Infrastructure as Code beyond CloudFormation — CDK gets mentioned explicitly. Understanding the IaC workflow (not just templates) matters now.
No more exam labs — SOA-C02 had a notorious hands-on lab section. SOA-C03 is 65 multiple-choice/multiple-response questions in 130 minutes. Some people love this change, others hate losing the practical component.
The Exam Details
- 65 questions, 130 minutes (50 scored + 15 unscored)
- Passing score: 720/1000
- Cost: $150 USD
- Format: Multiple-choice and multiple-response only (no labs!)
- Validity: 3 years
Why Most People Will Fail This Exam
Here's the trap: people study for SOA-C03 like it's still the SysOps exam. They memorize CloudWatch metrics and EC2 instance types, then get blindsided by questions about ECS task placement strategies, Organizations delegation, and multi-Region failover architectures.
The exam has shifted from "what does this button do" to "what would you do in this scenario." Every question is a mini architecture decision.
My Prep Strategy
After researching what works, here's what I'd recommend:
Start with the official exam guide — Read it carefully. Map every service mentioned to hands-on experience.
Focus on Systems Manager — SSM comes up in almost every domain. Patch Manager, Session Manager, Parameter Store, Run Command — know them cold.
Practice scenario-based questions — Not just trivia. You need questions that force you to choose between multiple valid-looking answers.
Don't skip networking — 14% doesn't sound like much until you realize VPC peering, Transit Gateway, and Route 53 health checks are fair game.
For free practice questions that actually match the SOA-C03 format, I've been using ExamCert's SOA-C03 practice test. $4.99 lifetime access for the full bank with a pass-or-refund guarantee — compared to $150 for the exam and $300+ for Boson/Whizlabs practice sets, that's basically free insurance.
Bottom Line
SOA-C03 is a genuinely different exam from its predecessor. If you're an ops engineer who lives in CloudWatch and Systems Manager daily, you're already halfway there. If you're coming from a pure development background, budget extra time for the networking and reliability domains.
The rename from SysOps to CloudOps isn't marketing fluff — it reflects where cloud operations is actually heading. The exam is harder, but it's also more relevant to what employers actually want.
Currently prepping for SOA-C03 or recently passed it? Drop your experience in the comments — especially if you took both the old and new versions.
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