Everything to know before CompTIA Network+ (N10-009): exam format and pacing, who it’s for, skills measured by domain, a readiness checklist, a 4–6 week study plan, PBQ expectations, and exam-day tactics.
Study funnel: Read this Overview → work the Syllabus objective-by-objective → keep the Cheatsheet open for fast recall → validate with Practice.
1) Networking concepts (23%)
OSI model, addressing/subnetting, protocols, network functions, and cloud/virtual networking concepts.
2) Network implementation (20%)
Deploy wired/wireless connectivity, configure key services, and implement common routing/switching patterns.
3) Network operations (19%)
Monitoring, documentation, change management, incident response basics, and operational best practices.
4) Network security (14%)
Hardening, secure protocols, segmentation, AAA, and foundational security controls.
5) Network troubleshooting (24%)
Systematic diagnosis using symptoms, OSI reasoning, and tools (CLI + packet capture).
If you checked fewer than 5, spend two extra days on subnetting + troubleshooting drills before taking full mocks.
Week 1 — Networking concepts
OSI, TCP/UDP, addressing/subnetting, NAT, core protocols.
Daily: 20–25 questions + 10 minutes subnetting reps.
Week 2 — Implementation
Switching (VLANs/STP), routing basics, wireless standards, DHCP/DNS basics.
Lab: build a small two-VLAN network in VMs (or a home router + managed switch).
Week 3 — Operations
Monitoring (SNMP/syslog), documentation, baselining, change control, common ops workflows.
Lab: interpret logs, build a simple “network diagram + IP plan” document.
Week 4 — Security
Segmentation, secure management, AAA, VPN basics, hardening checklists.
Practice: do scenario sets where you pick the most secure-but-realistic control.
Week 5–6 — Troubleshooting + mocks
2–3 full mocks under time; review every miss; re-drill weakest domains and PBQ-style items.
PBQs usually test “do you know what to do next?” using:
ipconfig, ping, tracert, nslookup, route tables)Strategy: leave PBQs for the end, but scan them early so you know what knowledge they require.