AWS Cloud Practitioner in São Paulo
Entry-level AWS certification validating foundational cloud concepts, core services, security, and pricing models.
What is AWS Cloud Practitioner?
The AWS Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) is Amazon Web Services' entry-level cloud certification, designed to validate foundational knowledge of AWS services, cloud concepts, security, and pricing models. No technical background is required, making it accessible to IT professionals, business analysts, and career changers alike. In São Paulo — Brazil's largest tech market and the headquarters for major cloud adopters like Itaú, Mercado Livre, and hundreds of AWS-partnered firms — this credential has become a baseline expectation for anyone working adjacent to cloud infrastructure. As AWS continues to expand its São Paulo region, local employers are actively prioritizing candidates who can demonstrate verified cloud fluency, even at the foundational level.
With the average IT salary in São Paulo sitting around $35,000/yr, a certified AWS Cloud Practitioner can realistically expect an $8,000/yr uplift — that's roughly a 23% salary increase from a single certification that costs just $100 to sit. The São Paulo cloud job market is growing fast, driven by fintech, e-commerce, and enterprise digital transformation. Even if you're not in a purely technical role, having CLF-C02 on your CV signals that you understand the cloud environment your team operates in. The certification renews every three years, meaning your one-time investment in study time pays dividends across a long window. For early-career professionals in Brazil, this is one of the highest-ROI credentials available.
Exam details
Prerequisites: None required
12-week study plan
Exam tips
Do not memorize service configurations — CLF-C02 tests what AWS services do and when to use them, not how to set them up technically.
Know the difference between services that are global versus regional: IAM and Route 53 are global, while EC2 and S3 buckets are region-specific — this comes up frequently.
Study the AWS shared responsibility model deeply; questions about what AWS manages versus what the customer manages appear in multiple domains and are easy marks if you know the framework cold.
For billing questions, always think in terms of which pricing model minimizes cost for a given usage pattern — exam scenarios often describe a workload and ask you to match it to On-Demand, Reserved, or Spot pricing.
When unsure between two answer choices, eliminate options that mention managing physical hardware or data center infrastructure — AWS always owns that layer, and any answer implying otherwise is almost certainly wrong.