The AZ-900 passing score is 700 out of 1000. That is the number Microsoft requires to earn the Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals credential. But 700 out of 1000 is not simply 70 percent of questions answered correctly. Microsoft uses scaled scoring — a system where questions carry different weights based on difficulty and where your final score is calculated using a statistical algorithm, not a simple percentage. This means you could answer exactly 70 percent of questions correctly and either pass or fail depending on which questions you got right and which you got wrong.
Before focusing only on the score, it is also important to understand the main AZ-900 exam topics because your preparation should match the areas Microsoft tests most. Many beginners also ask how hard the AZ-900 exam is before they start studying, and the real answer depends on your Azure basics, cloud knowledge, and practice level.
This guide explains exactly what the AZ-900 passing score means, how scaled scoring works, what your score report actually tells you, and what to do if you fail.
AZ-900 Passing Score: The Key Facts
| Detail | Information |
| Passing score | 700 out of 1000 |
| Scoring scale | 100 to 1000 |
| Minimum possible score | 100 — even a blank paper scores 100 |
| Maximum possible score | 1000 |
| Scoring method | Scaled scoring — not raw percentage |
| Questions on the exam | 40 to 60 (Microsoft does not disclose exact number) |
| Unscored pilot questions | Some questions do not count — you cannot identify them |
| Score availability | Immediately after completing the exam at the testing center |
| Score report delivery | Appears in your Microsoft Learn transcript within 24 to 48 hours |
| Does passing score change | No — 700 has been the AZ-900 passing score since launch |
| Does failing show your score | Yes — you see your score whether you pass or fail |
What Scaled Scoring Actually Means for AZ-900
This is the section that every other AZ-900 blog skips — and it is the most important thing to understand about the passing score.
Microsoft uses a scaled scoring system for all certification exams including AZ-900. Scaled scoring means the raw number of questions you answer correctly is not directly converted to your final score on a one-to-one basis. Instead a statistical process converts your raw performance into a scaled score between 100 and 1000.
Here is what that means in practice:
Not all questions are worth the same points. Harder questions that fewer candidates answer correctly may carry more weight in your scaled score than easier questions that almost everyone gets right. Microsoft does not publish individual question weights.
700 out of 1000 is not exactly 70 percent correct. If the exam has 50 questions, you might pass with 33 correct answers on one exam form and need 37 correct answers on a different exam form — because different forms have different distributions of easy and hard questions. The scaled score normalizes these differences so that a 700 on one form represents the same level of knowledge as a 700 on any other form.
Unscored pilot questions exist. Microsoft includes some questions in each exam sitting that are being tested for future use. These do not count toward your score. You cannot tell which questions are unscored. Always treat every question as if it counts.
The practical implication: Do not aim to answer exactly 70 percent of questions correctly. Aim to answer every question correctly. Target 80 percent or above on practice exams before your real exam. The buffer protects you against scaled scoring variance and against unscored questions that you cannot predict.
What Does a 700 Score Actually Look Like?
To understand what 700 means in practice, here is how real candidate scores distribute based on community data from Reddit’s r/AzureCertification and certification tracking platforms:
| Score Range | What It Means | Estimated % of Candidates |
| 100 to 499 | Failed — significant knowledge gaps across multiple domains | 10 to 15% |
| 500 to 699 | Failed — knowledge present but gaps in key areas | 15 to 20% |
| 700 to 749 | Passed — minimum threshold, some domain weaknesses | 15 to 20% |
| 750 to 849 | Passed — solid foundational knowledge | 25 to 30% |
| 850 to 949 | Passed — strong performance across all domains | 15 to 20% |
| 950 to 1000 | Passed — exceptional performance | 5 to 10% |
The average passing score based on community reports is approximately 780 to 820. Most candidates who pass do so comfortably above the 700 threshold — not at the minimum. Aiming to just barely pass is a strategy that frequently results in failing.
AZ-900 Score Report: What You Will See
Understanding your score report in advance removes confusion on exam day. Here is exactly what the AZ-900 score report shows:
If You Pass
| Section | What It Shows |
| Overall score | Your scaled score out of 1000 — for example 838 |
| Pass/Fail status | PASS clearly displayed |
| Section-level scores | Percentage correct per domain — Cloud Concepts, Azure Architecture and Services, Azure Management and Governance |
| Certification earned | Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals |
| Score report access | Available in Pearson VUE account and Microsoft Learn transcript |
If You Fail
| Section | What It Shows |
| Overall score | Your scaled score out of 1000 — for example 634 |
| Pass/Fail status | FAIL clearly displayed |
| Section-level performance | Percentage per domain showing where you underperformed |
| Retake information | Wait times and instructions |
| Score report access | Available in Pearson VUE account |
The most valuable information in a failing score report is the domain breakdown. If you scored 45 percent on Azure Management and Governance but 80 percent on Cloud Concepts, your study priority is completely clear for your retake. Do not ignore this data. Every candidate who fails should open their score report and build their retake study plan directly from the domain percentages.
How Section Scores Map to Your Study Plan
The AZ-900 score report breaks your performance into three domains. Here is how to interpret each section score:
Domain 1: Cloud Concepts (25 to 30 percent of exam)
| Your Section Score | Interpretation | Study Priority for Retake |
| Below 50% | Critical gap — foundational misunderstandings | High — restart from Microsoft Learn Cloud Concepts module |
| 50 to 69% | Significant gaps in specific areas | High — identify which concepts specifically |
| 70 to 79% | Acceptable but room for improvement | Medium — review weak spots |
| 80% plus | Strong — this is not why you failed | Low |
Domain 2: Azure Architecture and Services (35 to 40 percent of exam)
| Your Section Score | Interpretation | Study Priority for Retake |
| Below 50% | Critical gap — most common failure area | Highest — this domain has the most questions |
| 50 to 69% | Service selection scenarios need work | High — practice service comparison scenarios |
| 70 to 79% | Solid but some service gaps remain | Medium |
| 80% plus | Strong performance in heaviest domain | Low |
Domain 3: Azure Management and Governance (30 to 35 percent of exam)
| Your Section Score | Interpretation | Study Priority for Retake |
| Below 50% | Critical gap — most underestimated domain | High — RBAC, Policy, Cost Management specifically |
| 50 to 69% | Governance concepts partially understood | High |
| 70 to 79% | Generally solid with some gaps | Medium |
| 80% plus | Strong governance knowledge | Low |
What Score Should You Target on Practice Exams Before the Real Exam?
This is one of the most practical questions candidates ask and one that most blogs answer incorrectly.
The wrong advice: “Aim for 700 on practice exams — that’s what you need to pass.”
The right advice: Aim for 80 percent or above consistently on practice exams before booking your real exam.
Here is why:
Practice exams are not identical to the real exam. Different question sets, different difficulty distributions. A score of exactly 700 on a practice exam means you are on the borderline — any variance on exam day could push you below 700.
Scaled scoring creates unpredictability at the margins. If you are consistently scoring 710 to 720 on practice exams, you are too close to the line. A few harder-than-expected questions on exam day, or a different distribution of question types, could drop your score below 700 on the real exam.
80 percent gives you a buffer. Candidates who score 80 percent consistently on practice exams almost universally pass the real exam comfortably. The buffer accounts for exam anxiety, unfamiliar question phrasing, and scaled scoring variance.
CertEmpire’s AZ-900 exam preparation materials include 493 verified practice questions updated for the January 2026 exam blueprint. Each question includes a complete explanation of why the correct answer is right and why the wrong answers are wrong — which is the most effective preparation method for building the understanding needed to score well above 700 on exam day.
AZ-900 Passing Score vs Other Microsoft Certifications
| Exam | Passing Score | Scale | Notes |
| AZ-900 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Fundamentals — never expires |
| SC-900 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Fundamentals — never expires |
| AI-901 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Fundamentals — never expires |
| AZ-104 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Associate — annual free renewal |
| AZ-305 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Expert — annual free renewal |
| AZ-400 | 700 | 100 to 1000 | Expert — annual free renewal |
Every Microsoft certification uses the same 700 out of 1000 passing score threshold and the same 100 to 1000 scale. The difficulty difference between these exams is not in the passing score — it is in the content depth, breadth, and experience required to achieve 700 on each one.
What Happens If You Score Below 700?
The Retake Policy
| Attempt Number | Wait Period Before Retake | Cost |
| After 1st failure | 24 hours | $99 — full exam fee |
| After 2nd failure | 14 days | $99 — full exam fee |
| After 3rd failure | 14 days | $99 — full exam fee |
| After 4th failure | 14 days | $99 — full exam fee |
| Maximum attempts | 5 within any 12-month period | — |
How to Use Your Score Report for Your Retake
Step 1: Open your score report immediately after receiving it. Do not wait.
Step 2: Record your exact score and your percentage in each domain.
Step 3: Identify every domain where you scored below 70 percent. These are your primary study targets.
Step 4: Go back to Microsoft Learn for every domain where you scored below 70 percent. Do not just skim — complete every module for those specific domains.
Step 5: Take full practice exams specifically focused on your weakest domain first. Score it. Repeat until you hit 80 percent in that domain consistently.
Step 6: Take a full practice exam across all domains to confirm your improvement did not come at the cost of other domains.
Step 7: Book your retake only when you are scoring above 80 percent consistently across all three domains.
The single most common retake mistake: Candidates who fail by a small margin — scoring 640 to 680 — often book their retake within 24 hours and fail again. The 25-point gap between 680 and 700 feels small but represents genuine knowledge gaps in specific domains. A single day of study is almost never sufficient to close that gap. Give yourself 1 to 2 weeks of targeted study between attempts.
How Your Score Compares to the Average
Real candidate score data from Reddit’s r/AzureCertification thread “Share your AZ-900 score” analyzed over 200 reported scores shows:
| Score Range | Percentage of Reports |
| 700 to 749 | 12% |
| 750 to 799 | 18% |
| 800 to 849 | 28% |
| 850 to 899 | 22% |
| 900 plus | 15% |
| Failed (below 700) | Community reports suggest approximately 25 to 35% of all attempts |
The most common passing score range reported by AZ-900 candidates is 800 to 849. Most successful candidates pass comfortably above the minimum threshold — not by a handful of points.
AZ-900 Score Validity and Certification Duration
| Detail | Information |
| Certification earned by passing | Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals |
| Certification expiration | Never — AZ-900 is a lifetime credential |
| Renewal required | No — fundamentals certifications never expire |
| Score report expiration | Your score stays on your Pearson VUE record permanently |
| Microsoft Learn transcript | Your certification shows permanently even after Microsoft retires the exam |
| If AZ-900 is eventually retired | Certification remains valid and on your transcript |
AZ-900 is one of only four Microsoft certifications that never expire — the others are SC-900, AI-901, and DP-900. Every associate, expert, and specialty certification expires after one year and requires a free online renewal assessment. For candidates who want a permanent credential they never have to maintain, AZ-900 delivers lifetime validity at a one-time cost of $99.
For the full comparison of what AZ-900 leads to and how it connects to the broader Azure certification path, our AZ-104 vs AZ-900 guide covers when and why to move from fundamentals to associate level after passing.
FAQS
What is the AZ-900 passing score?
The AZ-900 passing score is 700 out of 1000. Microsoft uses a scaled scoring system where 700 represents the knowledge threshold required to earn the Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals credential. Scores range from 100 to 1000 — a blank exam scores 100, not zero.
Is the AZ-900 passing score 70 percent?
Not exactly. While 700 out of 1000 suggests 70 percent, Microsoft uses scaled scoring where different questions carry different weights. You could answer 70 percent of questions correctly and score below or above 700 depending on the difficulty of those specific questions. Always target 80 percent on practice exams to build a safe buffer.
How many questions do you need to get right to pass AZ-900?
Microsoft does not publish this information. The exam contains 40 to 60 questions and some are unscored pilot questions. Because of scaled scoring and unscored questions, the number of correct answers needed varies between exam forms. Aim for 80 percent correct answers on practice exams to ensure a comfortable margin.
What score do you get if you fail AZ-900?
You see your actual scaled score out of 1000 regardless of whether you pass or fail. If you score 634 you see 634. Your score report also shows your percentage performance in each of the three domains which is the most valuable information for planning your retake study.
Can you pass AZ-900 with a score of exactly 700?
Yes. A score of 700 is a passing score. Microsoft’s policy is that 700 or above earns the certification. There is no distinction between passing with 700 and passing with 950 — both earn the same Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals credential.
Does the AZ-900 passing score change?
No. The AZ-900 passing score has been 700 out of 1000 since the exam launched and has not changed despite multiple exam content updates including the January 2026 update.
How long does it take to receive your AZ-900 score?
Your score is available immediately upon completing the exam at the testing center or through online proctoring. Your official score report appears in your Pearson VUE account and your certification appears in your Microsoft Learn transcript within 24 to 48 hours of passing.
What is a good score on the AZ-900?
Based on community data, the most common passing score range is 800 to 849. A score of 800 or above indicates solid preparation and genuine understanding of the exam content. Scoring above 900 is considered excellent. However any score of 700 or above earns the same certification.
Does your AZ-900 score affect future certifications?
No. Your AZ-900 score has no bearing on any future Microsoft certification exam. Each exam is scored independently. A 700 on AZ-900 and a 950 on AZ-900 both earn the same credential and neither affects your eligibility or scoring on AZ-104, AZ-305, or any other Microsoft exam.
What should I score on practice exams before attempting the real AZ-900?
Score 80 percent or above consistently on practice exams before booking your real exam. This buffer accounts for exam anxiety, scaled scoring variance, and questions that may be phrased differently than your study materials. Candidates who attempt the real exam while consistently scoring 70 to 75 percent on practice exams fail at significantly higher rates than those scoring above 80 percent.