certification
Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES)
Source-cited RoleMath page about Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES).
Check if you’re ready ↓Researched by RoleMath Research. Every figure on this page traces to the official source shown next to it.
An experience-gated credential — the experience comes first.
Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES) gates full certification behind substantial work experience (Exam without official training requires a minimum of 1 year of work experience in the InfoSec domain.). You can study the domains and even sit the exam, but the honest path is to build that experience first — it is a vendor requirement, not a RoleMath judgment. RoleMath Difficulty methodology
Who this certification is designed for
The vendor’s stated audience, plus an honest fit for your starting point. No pass rates, no guarantees.
Per EC-Council: Exam without official training requires a minimum of 1 year of work experience in the InfoSec domain. Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES) — official vendor page
Funding to check: exam and prep costs may be reachable through vouchers, WIOA, Workforce Pell, GI Bill, or employer education assistance — eligibility depends on your location, provider, and status. Compare funding options →
Difficulty profile
A cited estimate of what the exam requires, split into two honest lenses — not one number, not a pass rate. RoleMath Difficulty methodology
These are exam-structure lenses, not a pass rate or anything about you.
Cost & upkeep
Exam fee plus what it takes to keep it — the recurring cost most pages hide.
- Renewal terms
- EC-Council page states this certification is valid for 1 year; certificate periods are extended annually subject to CE fees, and renewal after the 3-year ECE cycle depends on required ECE credits and CE fee payment. Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES) — official vendor page
No ROI math here — we never compare cost to a salary.
Exam at a glance
How EC-Council administers the exam — the logistics only. This is format, not a pass prediction, and it says nothing about how hard the material is for your background.
- Format
- Multiple Choice
- Duration
- 2 Hours
Skills measured
The official objective domains and their exam weight — titles & weights only, straight from the vendor’s exam objectives. Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES) — official vendor page
Prerequisites
What's required vs merely recommended — stated plainly.
- Hard requirement
- Exam without official training requires a minimum of 1 year of work experience in the InfoSec domain. Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES) — official vendor page
- Experience for full certification
- Exam without official training requires a minimum of 1 year of work experience in the InfoSec domain.Direct exam candidates need eligibility approval and a non-refundable application fee. Official courseware purchase is also listed as a route that makes the candidate eligible to attempt the exam.
Version & change log
Which version is current — so you prepare for the exam that’s live today, not a retired one.
- Current version
- Exam blueprint version 1
What this proves — and how EC-Council says to prepare
EC-Council’s own framing of who earns it and what it signals, plus their free official study material. Quoted and cited — never dressed up as a job guarantee.
- What it signals you can do
- EC-Council official page or exam blueprint lists objective domains for this credential.
Job titles the mapped roles report
Reported job titles from the U.S. Department of Labor’s O*NET for the occupations Certified Encryption Specialist (ECES)maps to — the language of the market, not a placement or hiring claim. Titles vary by employer, seniority, and location.
- Information Security Officer
- Information Security Specialist
- Information Systems Security Analyst
- Information Systems Security Officer (ISSO)
- Information Technology Security Analyst (IT Security Analyst)
- Network Security Analyst
- Security Analyst
- Systems Analyst
Source: O*NET OnLine reported job titles for the mapped SOC occupations.
Pay context for the roles this maps to
Occupation-level government data for a related role — not a salary this certification pays you.
$75,090 to $199,850 · Cybersecurity Analyst (SOC 15-1212) BLS OEWS — Cybersecurity Analyst (15-1212), national
This is what the occupation pays across the whole economy — set by the job, your experience, and location, not by holding this certification. Your actual pay will differ. See the full role page →
Every figure on this page, sourced
The claims above trace to these records — the source, and when it was last checked. If a figure has no row here, we did not publish it.
| ID | Supports | Source | Checked |
|---|---|---|---|
| SCHEMA-CIT-1 | Schema citation | EC-Council Certified Encryption Specialist | ECES | EC-Council | Logged in source packet |
| SCHEMA-CIT-2 | Schema citation | EC-Council continuing education fees | Logged in source packet |
| SCHEMA-CIT-3 | Schema citation | EC-Council ECE policy | Logged in source packet |
| SCHEMA-CIT-4 | Schema citation | NICE Framework Mapping | Logged in source packet |
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