1500 Questions | AWS Solutions Architect – Associate 2026

Last updated on April 2, 2026 10:08 am
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Detailed Exam Domain Coverage: AWS Certified Solutions Architect – AssociateTo succeed in the AWS Solutions Architect Associate exam, you must master the art of designing cost-effective, fault-tolerant, and scalable distributed systems. This practice test bank is built to mirror the actual exam domains:Domain 1: Design a Secure Environment (18%): Focuses on IAM, encryption, and VPC security groups to protect data and infrastructure.Domain 2: Design a Resilient Architecture (18%): Covers Multi-AZ deployments, Auto Scaling, and disaster recovery strategies using Route 53 and ELB.Domain 3: Design Applications on the AWS Platform (24%): Diving into compute (EC2, Lambda), storage (S3, EFS), and database (RDS, DynamoDB) selection.Domain 4: Design and Deploy for Efficiency (20%): Performance tracking, caching with ElastiCache, and optimizing AWS costs.Domain 5: Design Operational Excellence (20%): Automation via CloudFormation, monitoring with CloudWatch, and centralized logging.Course DescriptionI have meticulously crafted this practice exam suite to reflect the real-world complexity of the AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate exam. With 1,500 original practice questions, I provide a level of depth that goes beyond simple memorization, helping you understand the “why” behind every architectural decision.Every single question comes with a comprehensive breakdown. I explain the logic for the correct answer and, just as importantly, why the other options are technically incorrect or not the most “AWS-recommended” solution for that specific scenario. My goal is to ensure you walk into the testing center feeling fully prepared to pass on your first attempt.Sample Practice QuestionsQuestion 1: A company needs to store a large number of images that are accessed frequently for the first 30 days, but rarely thereafter. The data must be immediately available when requested. Which S3 storage class is the most cost-effective?A. S3 StandardB. S3 Intelligent-TieringC. S3 Standard-IA (Infrequent Access)D. S3 One Zone-IAE. S3 Glacier Flexible RetrievalF. S3 OutpostsCorrect Answer: BExplanation:B (Correct): S3 Intelligent-Tiering automatically moves data to the most cost-effective tier based on access patterns without operational overhead or retrieval fees, making it perfect for this scenario.A (Incorrect): S3 Standard is more expensive for data that is rarely accessed after 30 days.C (Incorrect): Standard-IA has a minimum storage duration of 30 days but incurs retrieval fees, which might be higher if access patterns change.D (Incorrect): One Zone-IA lacks the redundancy of multiple Availability Zones, which may not meet “resilient” architecture standards.E (Incorrect): Glacier is for archival and does not provide “immediate” availability for frequent access in the first 30 days.F (Incorrect): Outposts is for on-premises AWS infrastructure and is not a standard cloud storage class.Question 2: You are designing an application that requires a database with a sub-millisecond latency and a flexible schema. Which AWS service should you choose?A. Amazon RDS for MySQLB. Amazon AuroraC. Amazon DynamoDB with DAXD. Amazon RedshiftE. Amazon DocumentDBF. Amazon NeptuneCorrect Answer: CExplanation:C (Correct): DynamoDB is a NoSQL database (flexible schema), and adding DAX (DynamoDB Accelerator) provides the required sub-millisecond latency.A & B (Incorrect): RDS and Aurora are relational (SQL) databases and typically have millisecond, not sub-millisecond, latency.D (Incorrect): Redshift is a data warehouse for OLAP, not for low-latency application transactions.E (Incorrect): DocumentDB is for MongoDB workloads; while fast, DAX + DynamoDB is the gold standard for sub-millisecond requirements in AWS exams.F (Incorrect): Neptune is a graph database, which is not primarily chosen for general flexible schema latency needs.Question 3: To ensure a resilient architecture, you need to distribute traffic across multiple EC2 instances in different Availability Zones. Which service is purpose-built for this?A. Amazon Route 53B. AWS Global AcceleratorC. Application Load Balancer (ALB)D. Amazon CloudFrontE. AWS Transit GatewayF. AWS Direct ConnectCorrect Answer: CExplanation:C (Correct): The ALB operates at Layer 7 and is designed to balance traffic across targets (like EC2) in multiple AZs.A (Incorrect): Route 53 is a DNS service; while it can route traffic, the Load Balancer is the specific tool for instance-level distribution.B (Incorrect): Global Accelerator improves latency for global users but isn’t the primary tool for intra-region AZ load balancing.D (Incorrect): CloudFront is a Content Delivery Network (CDN) for caching, not for direct load balancing to instances.E & F (Incorrect): These are networking connectivity services (connecting VPCs or on-prem to AWS) and do not distribute application traffic.Welcome to the Exams Practice Tests Academy to help you prepare for your AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate Practice Tests.You can retake the exams as many times as you wantThis is a huge original question bankYou get support from instructors if you have questionsEach question has a detailed explanationMobile-compatible with the Udemy app30-days money-back guarantee if you’re not satisfiedI hope that by now you’re convinced! And there are a lot more questions inside the course.

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