Starter Simulator
Try 20 realistic questions before you commit to anything. No credit card.
- 20 High-Quality Questions
- Authentic Exam Interface
- Detailed Explanations
- Unlimited Retakes
- Full Question Bank
- Advanced Analytics
Built by people who've sat both A+ exams and know what 220-1201 and 220-1202 actually test. Start free with realistic, hands-on questions. No credit card. No filler.
Same feel, same question types — multiple-choice, drag-and-drop, and performance-based. No surprises on test day.
Domain-level analytics across both Core 1 and Core 2 — so you spend your study time where it actually moves the needle.
Every answer explains the "why" behind it — the reasoning that makes the next question easier, not just a letter.
The free simulator gives you a real feel for the questions. When you're serious about passing on the first attempt, premium has everything you need.
Try 20 realistic questions before you commit to anything. No credit card.
Everything you need to pass on the first attempt. 700+ questions, full mock exams, domain-level analytics across all 4 exam objectives domains.
A+ isn't a vocabulary test. CompTIA gives you a situation — a machine that won't boot, a network drop that comes and goes, a user who can't print — and asks what you'd actually do. The exam leans on performance-based questions, where you configure or troubleshoot in a simulated environment, not just pick a letter. If your practice is all flashcards, you're rehearsing the wrong skill.
That's why plenty of people who "studied hard" still stumble. They practiced recall; the exam tested troubleshooting. Every question in our bank is built around that — realistic scenarios with answer choices written to be close, so the right one rewards understanding, not memorization.
The explanations are where the learning happens. Not "B is correct because it's best practice" — that teaches nothing. Ours break down why each wrong answer is wrong, what rules it out, and what the scenario is really testing, so the next one like it feels obvious.
A+ is two exams, and you need both. Core 1 (220-1201) covers Mobile Devices (13%), Networking (23%), Hardware (25%), Virtualization & Cloud Computing (11%), and Hardware & Network Troubleshooting (28%). Core 2 (220-1202) covers Operating Systems (28%), Security (28%), Software Troubleshooting (23%), and Operational Procedures (21%).
Each exam is a maximum of 90 questions in 90 minutes. Core 1 passes at 675 and Core 2 at 700, both on a 900-point scale. Notice the troubleshooting weight on Core 1 and the security weight on Core 2 — those are where careful candidates separate from the rest. Our simulator covers both cores proportionally, so your practice matches the real exam weighting instead of whatever's easiest to write.
The analytics after each session show your score by domain. If you're at 82% in Hardware but 54% in Networking, you know exactly where the next week goes. That beats grinding random questions and hoping the number climbs.
Start with the free questions without looking anything up — treat it as a diagnostic. When you review, don't just check what was right; read every explanation, including the ones you got by elimination. That's where the real gains hide.
On premium, run the domain mini-exams before the full mocks, and attack your weakest domain first. After two or three focused sessions, go back to a full timed mock and see whether the number moved. Most people see 10–15 point jumps in a weak domain after targeted practice.
One more thing: A+ uses drag-and-drop and performance-based questions, not just multiple choice. Our simulator includes those formats. If you've only practiced MCQ, the interface itself can eat your clock on test day. Get comfortable with every question type before you sit.
If you're starting your IT career, start with A+. There are no formal prerequisites — CompTIA recommends about 12 months of hands-on support experience, but anyone can register. It's the credential hiring managers look for first for help desk, desktop support, and field tech roles.
Security+ is the next step once you want to move toward security, and Network+ sits naturally in between for networking depth. Many people run A+ → Network+ → Security+ as a ladder. The good news: the troubleshooting and fundamentals you build for A+ make every cert after it easier.
A+ V15 launched in March 2025, so make sure you're studying the current 220-1201 and 220-1202 objectives — not the retired 1101/1102 versions. Everything in this simulator is aligned to V15. Prepare seriously with realistic questions and most candidates pass both cores on the first attempt.
"Passed both A+ cores on the first attempt. The performance-based questions here mirror the real 220-1201 and 220-1202 almost exactly — nothing caught me off guard."
— Yolanda Eberhardt, A+ Certified
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