Exam-focused answers on Network+ format, PBQs, subnetting, VLANs, wireless, tools, study strategy, and common scenario traps.
CompTIA positions N10-009 as the current Network+ V9 exam. The objective areas span networking concepts, implementation, operations, security, and troubleshooting, so the exam is broader than memorizing ports and cable types. It expects you to read a symptom, decide which layer you are really working in, and choose the least-wrong action with the right protocol, tool, or control.
CompTIA lists 90 minutes, a maximum of 90 questions, and a mix of multiple-choice plus performance-based questions (PBQs). The current published passing score is 720 on a 100-900 scale.
PBQs usually test applied reasoning, not raw memorization. Common patterns include:
ipconfig, ping, tracert, dig, or switch/router statusIf a PBQ is slow, flag it and return after you have banked the easier multiple-choice points.
Deep enough that you should be fast with it. Expect to identify:
You do not need exotic edge cases to pass, but you do need /24 through /30 patterns to feel automatic under time pressure.
Yes, but the exam rewards functional recall more than isolated flashcard trivia. You should know the high-yield set well enough to use it in a scenario:
5367/6880443224453389123161/1621812/1813If a question says “host can reach the IP but not the name,” the real win is recognizing DNS quickly, not just remembering that the number 53 exists.
Treat them as a set, not as isolated definitions.
A classic trap is choosing Layer 3 routing before you confirm the endpoint is on the right access VLAN or the VLAN is even allowed across the trunk.
Enough to make a good design or troubleshooting decision:
2.4 GHz is crowded and why 5 GHz or 6 GHz is often better1/6/11 matter for 2.4 GHz802.1X is the right choiceThe exam is more interested in practical wireless judgment than in reciting marketing speeds.
Yes. The current objective summary explicitly includes cloud concepts such as VPC-style isolation, network security groups, gateways, virtualization, elasticity, and scalability. The questions are usually still networking questions first. You are expected to reason about segmentation, routing, DNS, and reachability whether the environment is on-prem or virtualized.
At minimum, be comfortable choosing between:
ipconfig or ip a for interface configurationping for basic reachability and losstracert or traceroute for path visibilitynslookup or dig for DNStcpdump or Wireshark for packet capture awarenessThe exam often tests the best next tool, not every possible tool.
A focused 4-5 week plan works for many learners:
Keep a short miss log. Convert every recurring mistake into a one-line rule such as “IP works but name fails means DNS before gateway replacement.”
That depends on direction:
Network+ is strongest when you treat it as a foundation, not a stopping point.