Exam snapshot
- Exam: AZ-305 — Designing Microsoft Azure Infrastructure Solutions
- Role: Azure solutions architect (design + trade-offs, not day-to-day admin clicks)
- Format: mostly scenario-based multiple choice/multiple response, plus case sets and drag-and-drop
- Passing: scaled score 700 (0–1000)
- Prereq for the Expert cert: you typically need Azure Administrator Associate (AZ-104) as well (cert requirement, not a prerequisite to sit AZ-305)
How to use this hub: skim this page, then study the Syllabus objective-by-objective. Keep the Cheatsheet open for architecture pickers, and validate readiness with Practice under timed conditions.
Skills measured (by domain)
Microsoft’s published weighting (subject to change):
- Design identity, governance, and monitoring solutions (25–30%)
- Design data storage solutions (20–25%)
- Design business continuity solutions (15–20%)
- Design infrastructure solutions (30–35%)
What’s actually hard on AZ-305
- Competing requirements: “secure” vs “cheap” vs “global” vs “low-latency” vs “simple ops” (you must pick trade-offs explicitly).
- BCDR math and choices: RTO/RPO, zone vs region failures, active-active vs active-passive, and the operational cost of each.
- Identity + network intersections: private endpoints, conditional access, managed identities, and “who can access what” across tenants and networks.
- Service selection under nuance: SQL Database vs Managed Instance vs SQL on VM; AKS vs App Service vs Functions; Event Grid vs Event Hubs vs Service Bus.
- Governance at scale: landing-zone structure, policy initiatives, management groups/subscriptions, and cost allocation via tagging/budgets.
Readiness checklist (quick self-test)
Study plan (4–6 weeks, part-time)
Week 1 — Governance + Identity
Management groups/subscriptions, RBAC/PIM, policies/initiatives, Key Vault/managed identities.
Week 2 — Monitoring + Reliability basics
Azure Monitor & Log Analytics design, diagnostics routing, alert strategies, SLOs, Service Health.
Week 3 — Data services
Relational service choice and tiers, Cosmos DB patterns, storage redundancy, lifecycle, durability.
Week 4 — Infrastructure & networking
Compute decision-making (VM/AKS/App Service/Functions), hub-spoke/vWAN, Private Link, LB/routing.
Weeks 5–6 — BCDR + review
RTO/RPO design, DR patterns, runbooks/testing, then full practice mocks and remediation sprints.
Exam-day tactics
- Restate constraints first: availability target, compliance, latency, region scope, budget.
- Prefer simplest workable designs: managed services, fewer moving parts, automation-friendly.
- Eliminate unsafe answers: those that violate least privilege, expose private data, or ignore failure domains.
- Think in tiers: “critical” workloads get multi-zone/multi-region; others get simpler resilience.
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