A+ covers IT support fundamentals while CCNA focuses on networking. Here is how to decide which one to start with.
What Is CompTIA A+?
CompTIA A+ is the industry-standard certification for IT support and helpdesk roles. It covers:
- PC hardware, laptops, mobile devices
- Operating systems (Windows, macOS, Linux, Android/iOS)
- Troubleshooting methodology
- Basic networking and security concepts
- Cloud and virtualization basics
What Is CCNA?
CCNA (Cisco Certified Network Associate) is the world's most recognized networking certification:
- Network design, routing, and switching
- IP addressing, subnetting, VLANs
- Network security (ACLs, firewalls, VPNs)
- Wireless networking
- Automation and programmability
A+ vs CCNA Comparison
| Feature | CompTIA A+ | CCNA |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Hardware + OS + support | Networking infrastructure |
| Target Role | IT Support, Helpdesk | Network Engineer, Admin |
| Exams | 2 exams (Core 1 + Core 2) | 1 exam (200-301) |
| Difficulty | Beginner | Intermediate |
| Salary Impact | Entry-level IT roles | 30-50% higher than non-certified |
| Best For | First IT job, zero experience | Networking career path |
Which Should I Get First?
Get A+ first if you have absolutely zero IT experience. It gives you the broadest foundation and qualifies you for helpdesk and support roles immediately.
Go straight to CCNA if you already have basic IT knowledge or any hands-on experience. CCNA is more specialized, more recognized by employers, and leads to higher-paying roles. At CSB Academy, most students go directly to CCNA — it is the smarter investment.
The Ideal Path
For most people: CCNA first, then add security certifications (CEH, AZ-500) or advance to CCNP. A+ is only needed if you have zero background in IT.
Start here: Browse our CCNA and CompTIA courses or contact us for enrollment details.