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Free CompTIA Linux+ Readiness Test  ·  No login required  ·  Instant report

Most Linux+ candidates
think they're ready.
They fail anyway.

12 scenario-based questions across all 4 CompTIA Linux+ domains. Know if you'll pass or fail before you risk $338 on a failed attempt.

12 questions
12 min timed
4 domains covered
Free always
No credit card No email to start Results in 12 minutes Instant pass/fail report
Trusted by 42,965+ Linux+ candidates this year  ·  95% first-attempt pass benchmark

What this test does

1
Diagnoses your gaps — not just your score
12 scenario-based questions mirror real CompTIA Linux+ exam difficulty. Every answer is analysed for speed, confidence, and domain accuracy.
2
Pinpoints the 1–2 domains that will fail you
Most CompTIA Linux+ failures come from just 1–2 weak domains. This test finds yours before you lose $338 on a failed attempt.
3
Gives you a pass-ready date and action plan
Your report includes an AI-predicted date you'll cross the 90% readiness threshold — so you know exactly when to book.

Linux+ domains covered in this test

Scripting, Containers, and Automation
17
19 of exam
Security
19
21 of exam
Troubleshooting
25
28 of exam
System Management
29
32 of exam

Stop guessing. Know if you'll pass
Linux+ before exam day.

Free, instant, no login. Takes 12 minutes. Your report shows exactly what to fix.

No credit card No email to start Instant result

Frequently asked questions

How difficult is the CompTIA Linux+ exam? +
The CompTIA Linux+ is a professional-level certification that tests applied judgment, not just recall. Most candidates who fail do so not because they lack knowledge, but because they underestimate how deeply the exam tests systemd in realistic scenarios. Expect 8–12 weeks of dedicated preparation, heavy emphasis on scenario practice over passive reading, and a final 2-week phase of full-length mock exams under timed conditions.
What is the passing score for the CompTIA Linux+? +
The CompTIA Linux+ uses a scaled or proficiency-based scoring model. The specific passing threshold is 720/900 threshold - however, raw score alone doesn't tell the full story. Question difficulty weighting means consistently answering harder questions correctly is worth more than answering easy questions in high volume. Focus your preparation on the conceptual depth the exam rewards, not hitting a raw number of correct answers.
What topics are most heavily tested in the CompTIA Linux+? +
The CompTIA Linux+ places the highest emphasis on systemd and file permissions. These areas appear throughout the exam in different scenario framings and require genuine conceptual mastery - not surface-level familiarity. SELinux modes is a consistent high-error area for candidates who are well-prepared in other domains but haven't practiced applying it under scenario conditions.
How long does it take to prepare for the CompTIA Linux+? +
Most successful candidates spend 8–14 weeks preparing, depending on their prior background. The first phase should cover conceptual foundations including systemd and file permissions. The second phase should be dominated by scenario-based practice - this is where the real exam skills are built. Passive reading alone produces candidates who understand the material but can't apply it under pressure.
What is the most common reason candidates fail the CompTIA Linux+? +
The most consistent failure pattern is over-indexing on memorization while under-investing in applied practice. Candidates who can define every term but haven't practiced enough scenario questions find that the exam's real-world framing disrupts their knowledge recall. For the CompTIA Linux+ specifically, SELinux modes is the highest-error topic area for otherwise well-prepared candidates.
Can I retake the CompTIA Linux+ if I fail? +
Yes. Retake policies vary by certifying body but most allow a second attempt within 30–90 days. If you receive a performance breakdown by domain, use it ruthlessly - targeted preparation on your weak areas is significantly more efficient than repeating your full study plan. Most candidates who fail and receive specific domain feedback pass on their retake when they address those gaps directly.