Check Point Certified Automation Specialist (CCAS) Practice Test
Prepare for the Check Point Certified Automation Specialist exam with free practice tests focused on automation, orchestration, Check Point APIs, API development, troubleshooting, and self-service portal workflows. Each test has 20 questions with a short training timer for focused review.
Mixed Set — CCAS Practice Tests
Practice across the full CCAS automation syllabus with mixed sets covering orchestration concepts, Management API operations, API scripting, troubleshooting, and self-service automation workflows.
Domain Wise — CCAS Mock Tests
Use objective-wise CCAS mock tests to strengthen one skill area at a time. Check Point publishes course topics and learning objectives rather than fixed percentage weights, so the badges below show approximate objective share for study planning.
About the CCAS Certification Exam
Everything you need to know about the Check Point Certified Automation Specialist exam, who it is for, and how it fits into Check Point's Infinity Specialist Accreditation path.
What Is the CCAS?
The Check Point Certified Automation Specialist (CCAS) validates the ability to automate and orchestrate Check Point security management tasks. It focuses on Management API architecture, API tools, object and policy automation, scripting, troubleshooting, and self-service workflows used in Check Point environments.
CCAS is useful for security engineers, firewall administrators, automation engineers, DevOps-focused security teams, and Check Point partners who want to reduce manual policy work and build repeatable security operations. Related roles include Security Automation Engineer, Firewall Engineer, Security Operations Engineer, Network Security Engineer, and Security Platform Administrator.
Cybersecurity automation skills are valuable because organizations need faster, more consistent security changes. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports strong demand for information security analysts, with a median annual wage of $124,910 and projected 29% employment growth from 2024 to 2034.
Exam Format (2026)
Testing method: Pearson VUE proctored certification exam.
Exam code: 156-521, Check Point Certified Automation Specialist - R81.20 (CCAS).
Questions: Check Point does not publicly list a fixed CCAS question count on the open certification pages reviewed.
Duration: Not publicly specified for CCAS in current open Check Point materials. These practice tests use a focused 18-minute timer for each 20-question set.
Question types: Written certification exam items focused on Check Point automation concepts, APIs, scripts, and operational workflows.
Passing score: Check Point does not publish passing scores for every exam publicly.
Exam fee: Pricing can vary by country, voucher, and authorized training partner. Confirm the final fee during Pearson VUE checkout.
Eligibility Requirements
Prerequisite: The CCAS training prerequisite is Check Point CCSA certification.
Recommended knowledge: Candidates should understand Check Point Security Management, gateways, policy layers, objects, rulebases, and basic troubleshooting before studying automation.
Technical skills: Basic command-line experience, Bash scripting, REST API concepts, JSON, Postman-style testing, and security policy workflow knowledge are helpful.
Audience: Security engineers, developers, resellers, firewall administrators, and technical professionals who automate Check Point secured environments.
Validity: Check Point certifications and accreditations are valid for two years from the exam date.
CCAS Objective Shares — R81.20 Study Outline
Check Point lists CCAS as an Infinity Specialist Accreditation with exam code 156-521. Since fixed public percentage weights are not published for each CCAS topic, the table uses approximate objective shares based on the published learning objectives.
| Objective | Topic | Study Share |
|---|---|---|
| D1 | Introduction to Automation and Orchestration | 18% Objective Share |
| D2 | Check Point APIs | 29% Objective Share |
| D3 | API Development | 35% Objective Share |
| D4 | Self-Service Web Portals | 18% Objective Share |
How Our Practice Tests Are Designed
Automation-focused scenarios — Questions are built around practical Check Point automation use cases, including routine policy tasks, API-driven object management, gateway preparation, script execution, and troubleshooting workflows.
Objective-aligned mixed sets — Mixed practice tests combine automation concepts, Check Point APIs, API development, and self-service portal topics so you can practice the way real administration problems overlap.
Focused timer — Because Check Point does not publish a full public CCAS time-and-question blueprint, each 20-question test uses an 18-minute focused-study timer. This keeps sessions short while still building decision speed.
Domain-specific deep dives — Objective-wise tests help you isolate weak areas such as Management API commands, JSON and jq usage, Postman workflows, Bash scripting, portal orchestration, and debugging API scripts.
CCAS Exam Preparation Tips
Study Strategy
Start with Check Point fundamentals: Make sure you understand policy packages, layers, objects, gateways, Management Server behavior, and how administrators normally make changes before adding automation.
Practice APIs hands-on: Review Management API and Gaia API concepts, then practice object creation, policy changes, database updates, and read-only queries using realistic request/response examples.
Learn the tooling: Become comfortable with Bash, REST clients, JSON formatting, jq filtering, Postman collections, and reusable scripts that can safely automate security management tasks.
Test-Taking Strategy
Read the workflow carefully: CCAS questions often test which automation step should happen first, which API is appropriate, or which tool best fits a task. Identify the exact workflow before choosing an answer.
Separate automation from orchestration: Automation executes repeatable tasks; orchestration coordinates multi-step workflows. Many questions depend on recognizing that difference.
Troubleshoot logically: When scripts fail, think about permissions, API access, request syntax, object names, session handling, JSON structure, and whether changes were published or installed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Test Your CCAS Knowledge?
Start with a mixed set to measure your readiness, then use objective-wise tests to improve API, scripting, troubleshooting, and orchestration skills.
Start CCAS Practice Test 1 →Authors
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Security Practice Test Editorial Team is the expert content team at SecurityPracticeTest.com dedicated to producing authoritative cybersecurity certification exam-prep resources. We create comprehensive practice tests, study materials, and exam-focused content for top security certifications including CompTIA Security+, SecurityX, PenTest+, CISSP, CCSP, SSCP, Certified in Cybersecurity (CC), CGRC, CISM, SC-900, SC-200, AZ-500, AWS Certified Security - Specialty, Professional Cloud Security Engineer, OSCP+, GIAC certifications, CREST certifications, Check Point, Cisco, Fortinet, and Palo Alto Networks exams. Our content is developed through careful review of official exam objectives, cybersecurity knowledge domains, and practical job-relevant concepts to help learners build confidence, strengthen understanding, and prepare effectively for certification success.
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Sudhanshu Thakur: ReviewerEnterprise Technology and Digital Transformation Professional with 18+ years of experience in enterprise software, SaaS, industrial automation, and business consulting. Formerly associated with Rockwell Automation, Tech Mahindra, Emerson, ABB, L&T Infotech, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise.