05-12-2023 04:20 AM
The CCNA certification is theoretically valid for 3 years. But is it the case in the real world. What I mean is, if I have have an "expired" CCNA cert, will employers view it as worthless or do they not care whether or not it is expired?
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05-12-2023 06:21 AM - edited 05-12-2023 06:22 AM
hi @girrep its completely depends on the company. some companies need active certifications (for such as cisco partners specially) some companies needs knowledge only (but ccna certified). also you can do CCNP directly without CCNA now. if you plans.
05-12-2023 08:02 AM
no, I would not worry about "expired" CCNA cert. it still considered despite of it being expired. it also depends on your networking knowledge and memory. I mean you will be ok if u still remember CCNA level stuff. You can put "expired" or "retired" next to your cert on your Resume.
Most importantly (significantly) expired or not counts for CCIE and CCDE level of certs. Those who employed valid CCIEs have special "gold" partners statues and privileges, which give you benefits when dealing with Cisco sells and service people.
Regards, ML
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05-12-2023 05:15 AM
I'll suggest you please refer to the below link for more information.
05-12-2023 06:21 AM - edited 05-12-2023 06:22 AM
hi @girrep its completely depends on the company. some companies need active certifications (for such as cisco partners specially) some companies needs knowledge only (but ccna certified). also you can do CCNP directly without CCNA now. if you plans.
05-12-2023 08:02 AM
no, I would not worry about "expired" CCNA cert. it still considered despite of it being expired. it also depends on your networking knowledge and memory. I mean you will be ok if u still remember CCNA level stuff. You can put "expired" or "retired" next to your cert on your Resume.
Most importantly (significantly) expired or not counts for CCIE and CCDE level of certs. Those who employed valid CCIEs have special "gold" partners statues and privileges, which give you benefits when dealing with Cisco sells and service people.
Regards, ML
**Please Rate All Helpful Responses **
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