Common questions
Security+ training - answers before you start
How is this different from a video course or bootcamp? +
Video courses deliver the same content to every student regardless of what they already know. Our AI starts with a diagnostic, then builds a personalised roadmap around your specific gaps. The AI coach teaches each concept interactively through mindmaps. And the live AI tutor beside every practice question explains exam traps and manager-thinking logic that video courses never cover.
What does the AI mindmap coach actually do? +
For each concept in your roadmap, the AI builds an interactive mindmap showing how ideas connect. You confirm understanding concept by concept, and the AI won't move on until your mastery score hits the threshold. It also asks you to apply the concept to scenarios so you understand the "why" - not just the definition.
What can I ask the AI tutor during practice? +
Anything about the question. Most common: "Simplify this explanation", "What's the exam trap in option A?", "Why does the exam prefer this over that?", "Explain this from the manager's perspective", "What's the related concept?". The AI tutor is trained specifically on Security+'s decision framework - not just general knowledge.
What's the difference between the 3 plans? +
Monthly ($49/mo) - full training system, cancel anytime. Good if your exam is soon or you want to try it first. Lifetime ($199 one-time) - lifetime access, no recurring charge. Best for most people. Pass Mode ($599) - everything plus daily AI study plan, weakness repair engine, and free extension until you pass.
How long does the full Security+ training take? +
Depends on your diagnostic results. Most students put in 1–2 hours per day. 2–3 weak domains: expect 10–12 weeks. 1 weak domain: 4–6 weeks. The AI gives you a personalised timeline on Day 1.
I failed Security+ once - will this help me pass the retake? +
Yes - our second-attempt pass rate is 91%. The diagnostic pinpoints exactly which domains cost you the first attempt. You won't re-study everything - the AI targets only your real gaps. Most retakers are exam-ready in 4–6 weeks. The mindmap coaching re-teaches the exact concepts where manager-thinking tripped you up before.
Is Security+ hard? How long does training realistically take? +
Security+ has a global pass rate of 78% - more than half of candidates fail first attempt. The difficulty isn't content volume, it's question style: the exam tests managerial thinking, not definitions. With our AI training, most students are exam-ready in 8–12 weeks studying 1–2 hours a day. Retakers or candidates with strong backgrounds: as little as 4–6 weeks.
What's the best way to pass Security+ in 2026? +
Candidates who pass share three things: they start with a diagnostic (not a textbook), they practise decision-making not memorisation, and they use adaptive practice tests that mirror the real CAT-format exam. Every question has two technically correct answers; the exam picks the one a manager would choose. Our system is built around exactly this.
Is Edureify a better alternative to a Security+ bootcamp? +
Security+ bootcamps typically cost $1,500–$4,000, run for 5 days, and deliver the same lecture to every attendee. You leave with notes and a question bank - no personalisation, no follow-up. Edureify starts with a diagnostic so training is built around your gaps from Day 1. For most candidates, our system gets better outcomes at a fraction of the bootcamp cost - and you study around your job instead of taking a week off.
Real Security+ students. Real first attempts.
"Incident response sequencing is where I consistently lost points - I kept eradicating before containing.Edureify AI ran me through enough containment-first scenarios that the correct order became automatic. That alone probably accounted for 8–10 questions."
"I confused IDS and IPS in every practice test for the first two weeks.Edureify AI's paired scenario approach - same threat, IDS response vs. IPS response - locked in the distinction in a way definitions never did."
"The social engineering taxonomy questions are deceptively specific. Knowing phishing from spear phishing from whaling from vishing - and what distinguishes each - requires scenario exposure, not just reading. The platform's variety of attack-type scenarios made this automatic."