ProfessionalVendor-neutralHack The Box· issued from US

HTB CDSA

Hack the Box Certified Defensive Security Analyst

Hack the Box Certified Defensive Security Analyst

Exam fee
$215
Ongoing
Study time
150–300 hrs
Delivery
Validity

› Quality score

28.0 / 40

Four-axis SecProve rubric, each 0–10. SecProve editorial assessment — each axis carries a written justification so you can push back on any single call without dismissing the whole score.

Blueprint rigor
How well-defined and rigorous the exam blueprint is.
Defensive Analyst syllabus covers SOC triage, log analysis, SIEM workflows.
7.5/10
Practical evidence
Hands-on labs / written reports vs pure MCQ.
Hands-on lab portion with synthetic SOC-tier engagements.
8.0/10
Currency & upkeep
How aggressively content is kept current with the field.
Newest HTB defensive cert; lab content updates with HTB's defensive track.
7.5/10
Market recognition
How often this signal actually moves a hiring decision.
Growing in MSSP / SOC hiring; not yet a hiring-manager default.
5.0/10

› NICE Framework work roles

The NIST NICE work-role IDs this cert maps to. NICCS lookup.

PD-WRL-001PD-WRL-003
Recognition
Global
Exam languages
en

› Core domains covered

The 3 domains this cert is centrally about. Passing the exam demonstrates working knowledge of each.

› Prerequisites

Experience

Recommended: 3-5 years of relevant security experience. No formal prerequisite from the issuer.

› Progression

requiredrecommended

Where this cert fits in the typical learning path. Required edges are vendor-gated; recommended edges reflect de facto industry progression.

Required prereqs (0)

No vendor-gated prereqs.

Recommended priors (0)

No de facto priors typically expected.

HTB CDSA
Hack The Box
Required by (0)

No certs require this one.

Recommended next (1)

› Careers that commonly pursue this cert

SOC Analyst

Monitor, detect, and respond to security threats in a Security Operations Center. The front line of cyber defense.

› Common exam traps to study

Cybersecurity cert exams reuse the same 25 distractor patterns over and over — category confusion, RTO vs RPO, IDS vs IPS, MD5 vs SHA-256, and more. Once you can name the trap, you stop falling for it. Each archetype page covers what it is, the specific pairs candidates confuse, and how to avoid it.

See this cert’s domains highlighted on the interactive map, or compare it against the rest of the catalog.